How to Test Your Mouse
If your mouse feels off, the problem is usually one of five things: unwanted drift, double-click misfires, scroll wheel skipping, accuracy problems, or general tracking inconsistency. Each has a different test and a different fix. This guide shows you how to test for each one with free tools, and what the results mean.
1. Mouse Drift Test
Mouse drift is when the cursor moves on its own without you touching the mouse. This is almost always caused by a dirty sensor or surface problem, though it can also indicate sensor malfunction.
How to test: Place your mouse still on your mousepad and watch the cursor for 30 seconds. If it moves without you touching it, run the Mouse Drift Test for a definitive check.
What causes it: Dust or debris on the optical sensor (clean with compressed air), a highly reflective or glass surface (use a mousepad), or a failing sensor (may require replacement).
2. Mouse Double-Click Test
Double-click misfires happen when a single click registers as a double click or when a click fails to register at all. This is one of the most common mouse hardware failures and is often caused by a worn or degraded switch.
How to test: Use the Mouse Double Click Test to detect unintentional double registrations. The test shows whether your click is registering once or multiple times per physical press.
What causes it: Worn microswitches (most common after 1 to 3 years of heavy use), dirty contacts (can sometimes be fixed with compressed air or contact cleaner), or debounce firmware issues in some mouse models.
3. Mouse Scroll Test
Scroll wheel issues manifest as skipping (scroll jumps when you move the wheel one click), inconsistent scrolling, or a scroll wheel that does not click properly.
How to test: Use the Mouse Scroll Test to check whether your scroll wheel is registering each notch correctly and consistently.
What causes it: Debris in the scroll wheel encoder (blow out with compressed air), a worn scroll encoder (hardware issue requiring repair or replacement), or incorrect scroll speed settings in Windows.
4. Mouse Accuracy Test
Accuracy problems show up as the cursor not landing exactly where you intended after fast movements. This can be a sensor issue, but it is more commonly a DPI or sensitivity configuration problem.
How to test: Use the Mouse Accuracy Test to measure how precisely your cursor tracks your intended positions.
What causes it: DPI too high (the cursor moves farther than intended per movement), mouse acceleration enabled (makes the cursor behavior unpredictable), sensor quality on very low-cost mice, or a damaged sensor.
5. General Mouse Tester
The Mouse Tester provides a comprehensive overview of all button inputs, movement tracking, and scroll behavior in one place. Use this first if you are not sure what the issue is.
What it checks: Whether each button registers on press, whether buttons release cleanly, cursor tracking coordinates, and scroll wheel events.
Mouse Test Summary
| Problem | Test to Use | Likely Cause |
|---|---|---|
| Cursor moves on its own | Mouse Drift Test | Dirty sensor or wrong surface |
| Single click registers as double | Mouse Double Click Test | Worn switch or debounce issue |
| Scroll jumps or skips | Mouse Scroll Test | Dirty encoder or worn encoder wheel |
| Aim feels inaccurate after fast moves | Mouse Accuracy Test | DPI too high or acceleration enabled |
| Not sure which problem | Mouse Tester | Run general test first, identify issue, then targeted test |
When to Replace vs Repair
Double-click issues and scroll problems in gaming mice that cost over $40 can often be repaired by replacing the switches (Kailh GM series switches cost $5 to $10 and are a standard repair). For mice under $20, replacement is usually more cost-effective.
Sensor drift on a clean sensor and clean mousepad almost always indicates sensor failure, which is not cost-effective to repair on most consumer mice.