Reaction workflow

Reaction Time Test

Use this reaction time tool to test best, last, and average responses with early-click detection and repeat rounds.

3 / 5 / 10 rounds False start tracking Per-round breakdown
Tool profile
CategoryReaction
RuntimeReaction field
ModeReaction
StorageLocal + dashboard

Wait for the visual change, react quickly, and repeat several rounds to smooth out lucky or unlucky attempts.

Reaction field

Reaction

Wait for the visual change, react quickly, and repeat several rounds to smooth out lucky or unlucky attempts.

Rounds left0
Last ms0
Average ms0
Best ms0
Idle Ready for a fresh attempt.

Ready when you are

Use the controls below to begin. The runtime adapts to the selected tool mode.

Guest history stays in your browser. Signed-in users can also save results to the dashboard.

What it is

Reaction Time Test is a browser-based performance tool designed for quick practice, clean measurement, and repeatable sessions without downloads or account requirements.

How it works

After a random delay, the panel changes state. Clicking too early marks a false start, while valid responses are timed in milliseconds and added to your current round summary.

How to use it

  1. Choose a mode or timer preset.
  2. Start the session and focus on smooth, controlled input.
  3. Review the summary card, compare your score, and repeat with a different pace.

Tips

  • Keep your hand relaxed.
  • Focus on the color change instead of anticipating it.
  • Judge performance by average time across several rounds.

Common mistakes

  • Starting too aggressively and fading early.
  • Ignoring rhythm in favor of noisy movement.
  • Comparing scores across different devices without context.
FAQ

Reaction Time Test questions

Is Reaction Time Test free to use?

Yes. Every core test on this project works directly in the browser without paywalls or forced sign-up.

Do I need an account to use this tool?

No. Guest mode works immediately. An account only adds optional server-side result history and dashboard widgets.

Why can scores vary between attempts?

Small changes in rhythm, device feel, browser load, posture, and warmup level can all affect a short performance test.