Internet Speed Test
Measure your real download and upload speed, ping, and jitter. Tested against a global edge network with servers near you.
How the speed test works
The test sends small bursts of data between your device and the nearest edge server, growing the payload until your connection is fully loaded. Download speed is how fast you receive data (streaming, browsing, gaming downloads), upload is how fast you send (video calls, posting files), ping is the round-trip delay in milliseconds, and jitter is how much that delay varies. Because the servers sit close to you, the result reflects your actual line rather than the distance to a far-away test server. Wi-Fi, VPNs, and other devices on your network all affect the score - for your line's true ceiling, test on a cable with other apps closed.
Speed test FAQ
What is a good internet speed?
For HD streaming and video calls, 25 Mbps down is comfortable. 4K streaming likes 50+, and a busy household or heavy gaming feels best at 100+ Mbps with upload above 20 Mbps. Ping under 30 ms is great for gaming; under 60 ms is fine for most play.
Why is my result lower than my plan?
Wi-Fi distance and interference, an old router, a VPN, busy peak hours, or other devices using the line all cut real speed. Test on an ethernet cable next to the router with downloads paused - that number is closest to what your provider actually delivers.
Does the test use my data allowance?
Yes - a full run transfers data both ways, typically in the tens of megabytes range depending on your speed. On a limited mobile plan, run it sparingly.