Test your sustained click speed — how many clicks can you make in exactly 15 seconds? Click the arena as fast as possible. Get your CPS score, click count, rank, and see how your sustained speed compares to other players. Timer starts on your first click.
✓15-second sustained click speed test — timer starts on first click, accurate to 1ms — April 2026
✓CPS benchmarks and sustained click speed data sourced from competitive gaming community research and click speed test population data. All external links marked nofollow.
Source for click speed requirements in Minecraft PvP, Bedwars, and Hardcore Factions game modes. Context for why 15-second sustained click speed is specifically relevant to competitive Minecraft gameplay and hit registration mechanics.
Population-level CPS distribution data showing average, good, fast, and elite click speed ranges across different test durations. Source for the ranking percentiles shown in results (average 6 to 8 CPS, competitive 10 to 14 CPS ranges for 15-second tests).
How the 15 Second CPS Test Works:CPS = Total Clicks ÷ 2 | CPM = CPS × 60
Timer starts on your first click and runs for exactly 15000ms. All mousedown events within the window are counted. The test uses Date.now() for 1ms timing accuracy. On mobile, touchstart events are counted instead of mousedown. There is no warm-up period — the first click both starts the timer and counts as click 1, so be clicking at full speed from the very first press.
CPS Test 15 Seconds — Sustained Speed, Rankings, and What Your Score Means
The 15 second CPS test is the endurance and consistency benchmark of click speed testing. Unlike the 5 or 10 second tests, the 15 second test extends into territory where fatigue, rhythm, and consistency matter as much as raw speed — how fast you can click when going all-out with no pacing required. Most people score slightly higher on 15 second tests compared to 30 second tests because there is no fatigue penalty in a 15 second window.
The 15 second test sits between the 1 second test (too short to establish clicking rhythm) and the 5 second test (long enough for fatigue to affect scores). In 15 seconds you have enough time to establish your clicking rhythm and sustain it briefly, but not long enough for your finger to tire or your technique to degrade. This makes the 15 second CPS an excellent measurement of endurance capability — the click speed you can deploy in an instant combat moment in games like Minecraft Bedwars, Hypixel SkyWars, or any PvP scenario where a short burst of fast clicking is needed.
15 Seconds vs 30 Seconds vs 60 Seconds CPS Test
Each duration measures a different aspect of click speed. The 15 second test measures sustained endurance. The 5 second test measures short sustained speed. The 10 second test measures endurance and consistency. Most people score slightly lower on 15 seconds compared to 5 seconds. If your scores across both durations are nearly identical, your clicking technique is highly consistent with excellent endurance. If your 2s score is significantly higher than your 5s score, it means your sustained speed is good but you slow down quickly — endurance training will help more than speed training at that point.
How to Improve Your CPS — 15 Seconds Score
Start at full speed immediately. Since the timer starts on your first click, do not warm up. The first click is both the timer start and click 1 — so you should be at full speed from the moment you press.
Use a light bounce technique. Press just to the actuation point of the switch, not all the way to the bottom. The return spring on most gaming mice can fire faster than many people release, so light shallow pressing increases rate.
Take 10 attempts with 20-second rest breaks. The 15 second test is short enough for high-volume practice. Use rests to prevent finger fatigue from building across attempts.
Compare 15s and 30s scores weekly. Improvement on 15 second tests while 5 second scores stay flat means your sustained speed is improving but endurance is lagging. Improvement on both means all-round progress.
💡 Tip: Your 15 second CPS score is your sustained endurance baseline. When practising for Minecraft PvP, use the 30 second test for longer stamina training. Use the 15 second test to find your maximum peak speed and compare technique variants (regular vs jitter vs butterfly).
This Test Is Unblocked at School
CalculatorCove is categorised as an educational calculator tool on GoGuardian, Lightspeed, Securly, and most school content filters. This 15 second CPS test works on school Chromebooks and computers without a VPN. No download required.
Frequently Asked Questions
7 to 9 CPS is good for most gamers. Average is 5 to 7 CPS. Above 10 CPS is very fast and typically requires jitter or butterfly technique. The 15 second test is harder than the 5 second test because fatigue factors in, so scores are typically 0.5 to 1 CPS lower than your 5 second score.
105 to 135 clicks in 15 seconds is good (7 to 9 CPS). Average is 75 to 105 clicks. Above 150 clicks (10+ CPS) is excellent and competitive. The 15 second window tests both speed and ability to maintain it without slowing from fatigue.
Yes. 15 seconds is a meaningful middle ground between the 10 second test and the 30 second test. Long enough that pure burst speed is insufficient — you need consistent rhythm. Short enough to do many attempts per session. Many competitive Minecraft PvP players use the 15 second test because it approximates a sustained combat exchange duration.
Almost everyone does. Finger fatigue develops over 10 to 15 seconds of rapid clicking. The typical difference is 0.5 to 1.5 CPS. If your scores across both durations are nearly identical, your clicking endurance is exceptional. If the gap is large, endurance training with the 15 and 30 second tests specifically will help.
Timer starts on your first click using Date.now() with 1ms accuracy. Runs for exactly 15000ms. All mousedown events within the window are counted. The first click starts the timer and counts as click 1. No countdown before the test — be clicking at full speed from the first press.
Regular clicking with optimal technique reaches 7 to 9 CPS. Jitter clicking reaches 9 to 14 CPS but causes faster fatigue. Butterfly clicking reaches 12 to 20 CPS but is hard to sustain for 15 seconds. The best approach is regular or light jitter clicking at a consistent pace you can maintain throughout the full 15 seconds without slowing down.
Most people score 0.5 to 1 CPS lower on 15 seconds than on 5 seconds. Compared to 30 seconds, most score 0.3 to 0.8 CPS higher on 15 seconds. Use the 5-second test for peak speed, this test for endurance baseline, and the 30-second test for true stamina.
Yes. Take 5 to 8 attempts per session with 30-second breaks. Focus on maintaining consistent rhythm throughout rather than clicking as fast as possible only at the start. Track weekly averages. Most people improve 1 to 2 CPS with focused practice within 2 weeks of daily practice.
Yes. CalculatorCove is categorised as an educational tool on GoGuardian, Lightspeed, Securly, and most school content filters. Works on school Chromebooks and computers without a VPN. No download required.
Partially. A 1000Hz gaming mouse accurately registers all clicks. Light linear switches reduce clicking effort which helps maintain speed over 15 seconds. Technique and endurance matter more than hardware for most players.
For conventional single-finger clicking sustained over 15 seconds, above 12 CPS is exceptional. Using butterfly clicking, above 15 CPS for 15 seconds is elite. The practical competitive ceiling for 15 second regular clicking is approximately 10 to 12 CPS.
Yes. JavaScript timing is accurate to 1ms. All mousedown events within the 15 second window are counted. Minor variations between different CPS test sites (0.3 to 0.5 CPS) are normal. For consistent benchmarking, always use the same website and browser.