What Is Mouse Polling Rate?
Mouse polling rate is how often your mouse sends its position data to your computer, measured in Hertz (times per second). A 1000Hz polling rate mouse sends its position 1,000 times per second, once every millisecond. A 125Hz mouse sends it 125 times per second, once every 8 milliseconds. In practical terms, polling rate determines how quickly your computer knows where your mouse is at any given moment. Higher polling rate means more up-to-date position data, which reduces input lag and produces smoother cursor movement.
Polling Rate Breakdown: What Each Hz Level Means
| Polling Rate | Updates Per Second | Lag Between Updates |
|---|---|---|
| 125Hz | 125 | 8 milliseconds |
| 250Hz | 250 | 4 milliseconds |
| 500Hz | 500 | 2 milliseconds |
| 1000Hz | 1,000 | 1 millisecond |
| 2000Hz | 2,000 | 0.5 milliseconds |
| 4000Hz | 4,000 | 0.25 milliseconds |
| 8000Hz | 8,000 | 0.125 milliseconds |
Does Polling Rate Actually Matter for Gaming?
At 1000Hz, you are already in sub-millisecond territory for position updates. For most gaming situations, the answer is nuanced:
- 125Hz vs 500Hz: Noticeable. The 7ms difference between updates is large enough to feel as input lag in fast games. If you have a mouse capped at 125Hz, upgrading to 500Hz or 1000Hz will feel meaningfully better.
- 500Hz vs 1000Hz: Slightly noticeable for very sensitive players in fast-paced games. Most people cannot feel the 1ms difference in blind tests.
- 1000Hz vs 4000Hz: Marginal for the vast majority of players. Professional esports players at the highest levels may benefit, but the difference is 0.75 milliseconds, smaller than the variance in human reaction time.
The Important Catch: Your PC Must Handle It
Higher polling rate increases CPU load. At 8000Hz, the mouse sends data 8,000 times per second, and Windows processes each report. On older hardware or systems with many background processes, very high polling rates can actually cause micro-stuttering in games because the CPU is spending too much time processing mouse input.
For most gaming PCs (built in the last 5 years), 1000Hz has no noticeable CPU impact. 4000Hz and 8000Hz polling requires a more modern system to benefit without introducing other issues.
What Polling Rate Should You Use?
| Use Case | Recommended Polling Rate |
|---|---|
| Office work and web browsing | 125Hz to 250Hz (more than enough) |
| Casual gaming | 500Hz (good balance) |
| Competitive FPS gaming | 1000Hz (the practical standard) |
| Professional esports, high-end setup | 2000Hz to 4000Hz (marginal benefit) |
| Older or budget PC | 500Hz to 1000Hz (avoid 4000Hz+ to prevent stutter) |
How to Change Your Mouse Polling Rate
Method 1: Mouse software (most gaming mice). Open the companion app (Logitech G HUB, Razer Synapse, SteelSeries Engine) and find the polling rate setting under Performance or Pointer Options.
Method 2: Physical button (some gaming mice). A dedicated button on the underside of the mouse cycles through polling rate settings. Check your mouse's documentation for this feature.
Method 3: Driver settings (older or budget mice). Some mice have a polling rate selector in the Windows device driver settings.
Check your mouse performance with the Mouse Tester. You can also use the Refresh Rate Test to understand how your display and input system work together.