Internet Speed Checker

Test your download speed, upload speed, and ping in your browser.

Download and upload speedPing and latencyConnection qualityUpdated May 2026

Internet speed checker tool

Close heavy downloads or streams for a cleaner test. Wi-Fi, VPNs, mobile data, and browser limits can affect results.

Current phase

Ready

Not tested

0% complete

Speed test results dashboard

Speed results are browser-based estimates. Run more than one test for a more reliable view.

Download speed

Upload speed

Ping

Jitter

Test duration

Connection quality

Not tested

Temporary test data

Download and upload tests use temporary payloads, not personal files.

Browser estimate

Ping and speed results are browser-based estimates affected by local conditions.

Practical guidance

Use results for streaming, gaming, calls, uploads, and troubleshooting checks.

Dynamic Connection Insights

Run a test to estimate download speed, upload speed, ping, and jitter.
Upload testing uses temporary generated data, not personal files.
Ping estimates how responsive your connection feels, not just how fast downloads are.
Wi-Fi signal strength, router distance, VPNs, and background downloads can affect results.
Run another test at a different time if results look unusual.

How Internet Speed Testing Works

Download speed measures how quickly data reaches the device.
Upload speed measures how quickly data leaves the device.
Ping estimates response time.
Jitter measures variation in latency.
Browser tests are affected by Wi-Fi, device load, servers, VPNs, and network traffic.
Multiple tests can give a better practical estimate.

Download Speed, Upload Speed, Ping, and Jitter Explained

Mbps means megabits per second.
MB/s means megabytes per second.
Download speed affects streaming, browsing, and downloads.
Upload speed affects video calls, uploads, and backups.
Ping is latency, usually measured in milliseconds.
Jitter is how much latency changes between samples.
Speed test results can vary between runs.

Wi-Fi, Mobile Data, VPN, and Browser Testing Notes

Wi-Fi distance and interference can reduce speed.
Mobile data varies by signal and congestion.
VPNs can reduce or reroute speed.
Browser extensions and device load can affect testing.
Background downloads can distort results.
ISP plan speed and actual device speed may differ.
Testing by Ethernet can help isolate Wi-Fi problems.

Common Internet Speed Examples

Basic browsing: 1 to 5 Mbps. Email, chat, simple websites.
Video calls: 3 to 10 Mbps. Upload and ping matter too.
HD streaming: 5 to 15 Mbps. One HD stream.
4K streaming: 25+ Mbps. More if multiple devices stream.
Online gaming: 10+ Mbps. Low ping is more important than raw speed.
Large uploads: 10+ Mbps upload. Cloud backups and big files.

Streaming, Gaming, Work, and Troubleshooting Use Cases

Checking Wi-Fi speed
Troubleshooting slow browsing
Testing work-from-home connection
Video call readiness
Online gaming latency
Streaming quality checks
Upload performance
Comparing Wi-Fi and Ethernet
Checking VPN impact
ISP plan troubleshooting

Privacy and Testing Notes

Speed tests use temporary test data.
Personal files should not be uploaded for testing.
No account is required.
No backend storage is added by this page.
Server endpoints are contacted only for test requests.
Copied results stay under your control.

Method Explanation

1. Start the speed test.
2. Measure latency with lightweight requests.
3. Download a known-size test payload and measure elapsed time.
4. Upload a generated test payload if upload testing is supported.
5. Convert bytes and time into Mbps or selected units.
6. Calculate ping, jitter, and quality labels where supported.
7. Display results and practical connection guidance.

Frequently Asked Questions

An internet speed checker estimates download speed, upload speed, ping, jitter, and overall connection quality from your browser.