Reaction Time Test
Wait for green, then tap as fast as you can. 5 rounds — we take your average.
What is reaction time?
Reaction time is the gap between a stimulus appearing and your body responding to it. On this reaction time test the stimulus is the screen turning green, and the response is your tap or click. What you are measuring is called simple reaction time (SRT): one signal, one response. It is different from choice reaction time (CRT), where you have to pick the right response out of several — CRT is always slower because your brain has to decide, not just react.
For a healthy adult, simple visual reaction time averages around 200-280 milliseconds — roughly a quarter of a second. Interestingly, humans react faster to sound (about 170 ms) than to light, because an auditory signal reaches the brain a little quicker than a visual one. Your score here is the average of five taps, which is the fair way to measure it: a single tap can be a lucky guess or an unlucky blink, but an average of five reflects your real speed.
Average reaction time by age
Reaction time is fastest in your late teens and early twenties, then slows gradually with age as nerve conduction and processing speed decline. These are typical ranges for a simple visual reaction test — treat them as ballpark, not a diagnosis.
| Age group | Typical average | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Teens (13-17) | 190-215 ms | Peak reflexes |
| 18-24 | 200-230 ms | Fastest adult range |
| 25-34 | 210-240 ms | Still quick |
| 35-44 | 220-250 ms | Around the human average |
| 45-59 | 240-280 ms | Gradual slowing |
| 60+ | 270-320 ms | Slower, but trainable |
What is a good reaction time score?
- Under 180 ms - superhuman. Verify it is real and not a lucky early tap.
- 180-220 ms - lightning. Competitive-gamer territory.
- 220-260 ms - sharp. Faster than most people.
- 260-300 ms - right around the human average.
- Over 300 ms - warm up, remove distractions, and try again. Cold or tired reflexes are slower.
What affects your reaction time
Several things move your number, some in your control and some not. Age and genetics set your baseline. On the day, sleep, caffeine, alertness and mood all matter — a tired brain can be 30-50 ms slower. Your hardware matters too: screen refresh rate, input lag and even Bluetooth vs wired all add real milliseconds between the flash and your click registering. A 60 Hz monitor can add up to ~16 ms of display latency alone, so a gaming monitor will flatter your score versus a laptop. That is why comparing your own trend over time is more meaningful than comparing raw numbers with a friend on different gear.
How to improve your reaction time
- Rest your finger lightly on the button so you only move to react, not to reach.
- Watch the whole screen with soft focus rather than staring at one spot — peripheral vision picks up change faster.
- Do not anticipate. Guessing before green gives you a "Too soon" and hurts your average more than waiting does.
- Warm up with a few throwaway rounds. Cold reflexes are noticeably slower than warmed-up ones.
- Fix the basics: good sleep, a bit of caffeine, and a low-latency screen do more than any "brain training".
How this test works
Tap to start, wait for the screen to flip from red to green, then tap as fast as you can. Tapping during red is a false start and simply retries that round. After five valid taps we show your average in milliseconds, the label you earned, and where you land versus everyone else. Your best average and daily streak are saved in your browser with localStorage — nothing is sent to a server, and there is no sign-up.
FAQ
What is a good reaction time?
For a simple visual reaction test, a healthy adult averages about 200-280 ms. Under 220 ms is fast, and competitive gamers often sit in the 180-210 ms range. Under 180 ms is exceptional and worth double-checking for an early tap.
Why is my reaction time slower than 250 ms?
Being a bit above 250 ms is completely normal, and it is easy to be slower if you are tired, distracted, on a high-latency screen, or you have not warmed up. Play a few rounds, remove distractions, and use a wired mouse or a high-refresh screen for your best honest number.
Does my equipment affect the result?
Yes. Monitor refresh rate and input lag add real milliseconds between the green flash and your click registering. A 60 Hz laptop can be ~16 ms slower than a 144 Hz gaming monitor before your reflexes even come into it, so compare your own trend over time rather than raw numbers across different devices.
How is the score calculated?
We take the average of five valid taps. Averaging smooths out one lucky or unlucky round, so it reflects your real reaction speed better than a single attempt.
Can I improve my reaction time?
Somewhat. You cannot beat your genetic baseline, but warming up, sleeping well, cutting distractions, and using low-latency hardware can shave off 20-50 ms and get you consistently near your true best.
Is my score saved or shared online?
No. Your best average and streak live only in your browser via localStorage. There is no account and nothing is uploaded — sharing only happens if you tap the share button yourself.