Accurate Internet Speed Test & Network Diagnostics
Initiate a real-time deep-packet network test across globally distributed high-bandwidth edge clusters.
Diagnostic Grid
Complete Latency, Download and Upload test cycles to compute the connection grade analysis.
Real-Time Bandwidth & Speed Test Graph
Internet Speed Test History & Logs
| TIMESTAMP | ISP PROVIDER | DOWNLOAD | UPLOAD | LATENCY | JITTER | GRADE | ACTIONS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
No Diagnostics Logged Yet Your speed check records will automatically cache locally in LocalStorage. |
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WiFi & Broadband Quality Score
Speed Test Server & ISP Location Routing
Detailed Latency, Ping, and Jitter Measurements
Download Measurements
Upload Measurements
Latency Measurements
Packet Loss Measurements
Diagnostics Architecture
Engineered with low-overhead HTTP calls for pure telemetry reading.
Smart Progressive Testing
Calculates data rates incrementally, eliminating heavy buffer pre-allocation. Live counters reflect accurate speeds in real-time.
Parallel Latency Probes
Sends multiple non-blocking packet probes concurrently to calculate ping and true jitter using high-precision timers.
Adaptive Duration
Sensing packet transfer rate automatically truncates long buffer cycles under 5.0 seconds, preserving user bandwidth and time.
Understanding Network Metrics
Decipher the metrics that define your internet connectivity grade.
Download speed determines how quickly data is fetched from external edge servers to your device. Measured in Megabits per Second (Mbps), higher speeds allow seamless 4K/8K video streaming, quicker app updates, and faster web page loads. Generally:
- 25+ Mbps: Good for standard high-definition streaming on a couple of devices.
- 100+ Mbps: Excellent for smart homes and large file downloads.
- 500+ Mbps: Gigabit tier, perfect for heavy power users and enterprise tasks.
Upload speed dictates how rapidly your device can transmit data packages to remote hosts. It is vital for outbound processes like video calling (Zoom, Teams), multiplayer online gaming, streaming live to Twitch/YouTube, and backing up massive assets to cloud storage. Most home broadband architectures (DSL, Cable) are asymmetric, offering much lower upload speeds compared to downloads.
Latency represents the Round-Trip Time (RTT) required for a single data packet to transit from your browser to a cloud compute node and back. Lower latency values mean a snappier, more immediate connection. Critical benchmarks include:
- < 15 ms: Elite, gamer-grade fiber latency. Perfect for competitive multiplayer eSports.
- 15 - 45 ms: Solid, responsive connection for all consumer applications.
- 45 - 100 ms: Noticeable latency for real-time applications but functional.
- > 150 ms: High latency, often resulting in game lag and video-call interruptions.
Jitter represents the variance in packet arrival intervals over time. If some data packets take 10ms and subsequent ones take 80ms, the network Jitter will be high. High jitter causes packet stutter and buffer issues, leading to severe distortions in VoIP video calls and multiplayer gaming, even if your average download speed seems high. Excellent network health demands a Jitter below 3ms.