50 Second Click Speed Test
How fast can you click in 50 seconds? Click the button below as fast as you can and find out your CPS score.
This is part of our full click speed test suite. See all duration options at our CPS Test hub.
What Makes the 50 Second Test Different
The 50 second CPS test sits between the popular 30 second and 100 second formats, and it does something neither extreme quite captures. Thirty seconds is long enough to feel strain but short enough that most trained clickers can push through without a significant drop. A full 100 seconds demands a different kind of conditioning entirely. At 50 seconds, you get an honest picture of how your clicking speed deteriorates under real sustained effort without requiring the extreme staying power that only the most dedicated players build.
Your 50 second score will almost always be lower than your 5 second or 10 second CPS. This is expected. What matters is how consistent your rate stays across the full window. A player who averages 8 CPS on a 5 second test but drops to 5.5 CPS over 50 seconds has a stamina problem worth training. A player who maintains 7.5 CPS from the first second to the fiftieth has genuinely conditioned clicking fitness.
What Score to Aim For
For casual players attempting the 50 second test for the first time, a score between 5 and 7 CPS is typical. Players who regularly practice across different test lengths and have built some clicking fitness usually land between 7 and 9 CPS. Sustaining above 9 CPS for a full 50 seconds consistently puts you in the competitive range.
Compare your 50 second result to your 10 second score. If the gap is large, say you hit 11 CPS over 10 seconds but only average 7 over 50, focused long-duration training will close that difference faster than general technique work. If the gap is small, your staying power is already strong and technique refinement is the better focus.
How to Improve Your 50 Second Score
Long-duration clicking fitness comes from conditioning, not just speed. Train by targeting a consistent rate slightly below your maximum, around 80 percent of your best short-burst CPS, and hold it for the full 50 seconds without letting it drift. This steady-pace training builds the muscle stamina that all-out burst attempts do not.
Pay attention to which second your rate starts dropping. Most players have a specific fatigue threshold, often around 20 to 30 seconds in. Once you identify yours, you can target that window with focused practice rather than repeating the full 50 second test every attempt.
Equipment also matters at longer durations. A mouse with low actuation force reduces cumulative strain across thousands of clicks. Use our mouse tester to confirm all buttons are registering cleanly, and check your mouse polling rate to make sure every click is being captured accurately.
50 Second vs 30 Second vs 100 Second Tests
The 30 second test is where most competitive players benchmark their sustained clicking. The 50 second test adds roughly 65 percent more time on top of that, and the final 20 seconds are where real clicking fitness differences show. The 100 second test is a different category entirely, requiring a pacing strategy rather than sustained maximum effort.
If you are working toward a strong 100 second result, training on the 50 second format is one of the most effective stepping stones. It is long enough to build real stamina without the full physical demand of a 100 second session. Use the 60 second test alongside it to track your progress across the longer formats.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a 50 second test useful for gaming?
Most in-game scenarios last well under 50 seconds, but training at this length builds a clicking baseline that makes shorter bursts feel effortless. Players who regularly test at 30 and 50 seconds report that their 5 second and 10 second in-game performance improves noticeably.
Why does my CPS drop so much toward the end?
Finger fatigue accumulates with every click. At 50 seconds most players have clicked between 350 and 500 times, which produces real muscle fatigue. Rest between attempts and avoid back-to-back maximum-effort runs to keep your training data accurate.
How does jitter clicking affect 50 second results?
Jitter clicking is difficult to sustain for 50 seconds. The technique puts significant strain on the forearm and most players see a hard rate drop past the 20 to 30 second mark. Standard single-finger technique produces more consistent results at this duration.