14 Second Click Speed Test

How fast can you click in 14 seconds? Click the button below as fast as you can and find out your CPS score.

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14 second test • Click as fast as you can
Time
14s
Clicks
0
CPS
0

This is part of our full click speed test suite. See all duration options at our CPS Test hub.

One Second Before the 15 Second Format

The 14 second CPS test is the closest stepping stone to the standard 15 second format. Your 14 second result is a near-perfect predictor of your 15 second average. Most players score within 0.2 to 0.4 CPS of their 15 second result on this test because the physical and mental challenge is almost identical at these adjacent lengths.

Use the 14 second format to preview your 15 second performance in a lower-stakes context. If your 14 second score is where you want it, you are ready to attempt the 15 second format with confidence. If it is lower than expected, you know your target before the longer test begins.

What Your 14 Second Score Means

Between 4 and 6 CPS is a relaxed pace with no technique applied. Between 6 and 9 CPS is solid for casual gaming. Reaching 9 to 11 CPS over fourteen seconds shows strong clicking consistency. Above 11 CPS for the full fourteen seconds reflects advanced clicking ability and reliable technique.

The key comparison is your 10 second score. A drop of 1 to 1.5 CPS between your ten second and fourteen second averages is healthy and expected. A drop of 3 or more CPS suggests your technique starts breaking down past ten seconds and more mid-range format practice would help most.

14 Second CPS Test FAQs

Why take the 14 second test instead of just doing the 15 second test?

The 14 second format reduces the mental pressure of the extra second at the end. For players still building clicking fitness for longer formats, removing that final second makes the session more approachable while producing nearly identical training benefits. Once your 14 second score consistently hits your target, move to the full 15 second test.

Does jitter clicking work well at 14 seconds?

Jitter clicking works well at this duration for most trained players. Fourteen seconds sits within the range where jitter technique can be sustained without a significant fatigue drop if your forearm conditioning is reasonable.