Auto Clicker Test: How to Measure Your Click Speed
An "auto clicker test" usually means one of two things: testing how fast you can click, or checking how fast an auto clicker actually clicks. Both come down to the same metric — clicks per second (CPS). Here's how to measure it and what a good result looks like.
Test your own click speed first
The simplest way to get a baseline is a CPS test: you click as fast as you can for a set number of seconds, and it reports your clicks per second. You can run one right now with our free Click Speed Test — no install needed. Most people land around 5–8 CPS; competitive clickers push past 10 with techniques like jitter or butterfly clicking.
Testing an auto clicker
An auto clicker removes the human limit entirely. To test one, point it at a CPS counter and set the interval — for example, 100 milliseconds between clicks gives 10 CPS, 50 ms gives 20 CPS. A good auto clicker clicks at a precise, steady rate you control, so you can dial in exactly the speed a task needs rather than wearing out your hand.
How Kaizen handles clicking
For raw speed, Kaizen Fast Clicker is built to click as fast as you set, with precise intervals. If you need more than clicking — mouse movement, keystrokes, scrolling and scheduling — Kaizen Auto Mouse Click adds clicking to a full automation toolkit. Either way you set the exact CPS and let it run.
Bottom line
Run a quick CPS test to see your own speed, then use an auto clicker when a task needs a faster or steadier rate than your hand can manage. Just keep it within the rules of whatever you're using it on.