Tap as fast as you can — how many taps per second can you manage?
A tap speed test measures how many times you can tap your phone or tablet screen in one second. You tap as fast as you can for a set time window — 1, 5, 10, or 30 seconds — and the tool divides your total taps by the elapsed time to give you your taps-per-second (TPS) score.
It's the mobile equivalent of a CPS (clicks per second) test, but built specifically for touchscreens. No mouse required — just your thumbs and determination.
Touch tapping is naturally slower than mouse clicking. Here's how tap speed breaks down:
| Level | TPS Range | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Slow | 1–3 | Casual tapping. You're in no rush. |
| Average | 3–5 | Normal human thumb speed. Nothing to be ashamed of. |
| Good | 5–7 | Above average. Your thumbs are cooperating. |
| Fast | 7–9 | Genuinely fast. Gamers live here. |
| Elite | 9+ | Exceptional. The screen is struggling to keep up. |
The average mobile user taps at around 4–5 TPS over a 5-second test. If you're consistently above 6, you're faster than most people. Above 8 is territory where people start asking if you're using an autoclicker.
Use your thumb pad, not the tip. The flat part of your thumb has a shorter travel distance to and from the screen, which means faster taps.
Alternate thumbs. Using two thumbs in alternation can dramatically increase your TPS — each thumb gets a rest while the other is tapping.
Keep your grip relaxed. A death grip on your phone creates tension that slows your tapping muscles. Hold the phone loosely.
Warm up first. Cold fingers tap slower. Run a few practice rounds before you go for your high score.
Practice in short bursts. 5-second sessions build fast-twitch speed better than grinding 30-second endurance tests.
They measure the same thing — input speed per second — but on different devices. CPS measures mouse clicks. TPS measures touchscreen taps. Touch tapping tends to produce lower scores than mouse clicking because the mechanics are different.
This test only counts single-touch taps to keep scores fair. Multi-touch inputs are ignored. One thumb at a time.
This is a touch-only test designed for mobile devices. If you're on a desktop, try the CPS test instead.
Yes. Screen responsiveness, touch sample rate, and even screen protectors can affect how quickly taps register. Higher-end phones with 120Hz+ displays and fast touch sampling generally allow faster tap registration.