Quick Answer
- 1–4 CPS: Beginner — typical for new or infrequent mouse users
- 5–8 CPS: Average — where most adults click without any training
- 9–12 CPS: Good — above-average, solid for casual gaming
- 13–16 CPS: Excellent — competitive Bedwars and Minecraft PvP range
- 17+ CPS: Pro to World-class — requires jitter or butterfly clicking technique
Test Your CPS — Free
Measure your clicks per second across six test durations — 1, 5, 10, 15, 30, or 60 seconds — no sign-up, instant results, runs entirely in your browser.
Open CPS Test →CPS — clicks per second — is a measure of how fast you can click a mouse button in one second. Whether you are preparing for Bedwars, Minecraft PvP, or just curious how you compare to other players, knowing what a good CPS score looks like gives you a concrete target to aim for. The average person clicks at 5–8 CPS without any training; competitive Bedwars players routinely hit 12–16 CPS using specific techniques.
This guide covers the full CPS score chart, what score to target for different games, the four main clicking techniques, and practical steps to improve your clicks per second. If you have not taken a baseline test yet, use the free CPS test above before reading on — knowing your starting point makes the rest of this guide more actionable.
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What Is CPS and How Is It Measured?
CPS stands for clicks per second — the number of times you press and release a mouse button within one second. A CPS test records every click during a fixed window — common options are 1, 5, 10, 15, 30, or 60 seconds — and then divides the total click count by the number of seconds elapsed. A 5-second test is the most widely used standard because it is long enough to smooth out inconsistencies without fatiguing your hand.
Formula: CPS = Total Clicks ÷ Test Duration (seconds). If you click 55 times in 5 seconds, your CPS is 11.
CPS is different from APM (actions per minute), which is used in real-time strategy games. CPS measures raw click speed with a single mouse button; APM counts all keyboard and mouse inputs combined. For Minecraft PvP and Bedwars specifically, CPS is the relevant metric because sword combat is driven by left-click frequency.
CPS Score Chart — What Is Considered Good?
The table below shows CPS ranges and what each tier represents. These benchmarks are based on aggregated data from CPS testing platforms and reported scores across the Minecraft and gaming communities.
| CPS Range | Rating | Who This Describes |
|---|---|---|
| 1–4 CPS | Beginner | New gamers, elderly users, or people using a trackpad |
| 5–8 CPS | Average | Most adults clicking at a comfortable, untrained pace |
| 9–12 CPS | Good | Regular gamers, casual Bedwars players with some practice |
| 13–16 CPS | Excellent | Competitive Bedwars and Minecraft PvP players using jitter clicking |
| 17–20 CPS | Pro | Skilled butterfly clickers, top-ranked Bedwars players |
| 21+ CPS | World-class / Drag clicking | Drag clicking technique; typically banned on competitive servers |
Note: Your CPS score varies depending on your mouse, test duration, and hand fatigue. A 1-second test typically produces higher numbers than a 10-second test. Always use the same duration when comparing scores.
CPS for Bedwars — What Score Do You Actually Need?
Bedwars on Hypixel is the most CPS-sensitive popular game mode. In Minecraft Java Edition, sword combat uses a swing cooldown and knockback system that rewards higher CPS up to a point. More clicks per second means more hits registered per combat exchange, which translates to greater knockback dealt and faster kills.
However, CPS has diminishing returns. Hypixel's anti-cheat (Watchdog) is tuned to flag unusually high CPS levels, and the game engine itself cannot register hits faster than its tick rate allows. The practical sweet spot for Bedwars is 12–16 CPS sustained over the length of a fight — achievable through jitter clicking without risking anti-cheat flags.
| CPS | Bedwars Impact | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Under 8 | Noticeable disadvantage | Opponents will out-knockback you in most 1v1s |
| 8–11 | Competitive | Viable with good aim and positioning; fine for most lobbies |
| 12–16 | Strong advantage | The competitive target range — requires jitter clicking |
| 17+ | Marginal extra benefit; watch anti-cheat | Butterfly clicking territory; may trigger Watchdog |
Clicking Techniques — Regular, Jitter, Butterfly & Drag
There are four main clicking techniques used by gamers to achieve different CPS ranges. Each has a distinct physical method, a typical CPS ceiling, and server-rule implications.
Regular Clicking (5–9 CPS)
Standard single-finger clicking — press and release your index finger as fast as comfortable. This is how most people click naturally and produces 5–9 CPS. It is universally allowed on all servers. Good aim and game sense can compensate for lower CPS at this level.
Jitter Clicking (10–16 CPS)
Jitter clicking uses controlled muscle tension in your arm and hand to make your clicking finger vibrate rapidly against the mouse button. It produces 10–16 CPS when done correctly. The technique requires practice to maintain aim while jittering — many players find their crosshair shakes when they first start. It is legal on Hypixel and most Minecraft servers.
Health note: Jitter clicking puts repetitive strain on your wrist and forearm. Limit practice sessions to 10–15 minutes and stop if you feel pain or tingling.
Butterfly Clicking (15–25 CPS)
Butterfly clicking alternates two fingers (index and middle) on the same mouse button in a rapid alternating pattern. Both fingers tap the button in sequence, effectively doubling the click rate compared to single-finger clicking. This produces 15–25 CPS. Butterfly clicking uses no software modifications, but Hypixel's Watchdog may flag it at high CPS levels — always check current server rules before using it in competitive play.
Drag Clicking (25–100+ CPS)
Drag clicking uses friction between your finger and the mouse button surface to register multiple clicks in a single swipe motion. It can produce extremely high CPS numbers (25 to 100+), but is explicitly banned on Hypixel and most major Minecraft servers. Scores achieved through drag clicking are not valid for fair comparison.
World Record CPS — How Fast Can Humans Click?
The verified world records for sustained mouse clicking depend on the technique and duration. For a 10-second sustained test using regular or jitter clicking, top verified scores sit between 14 and 16 CPS. Guinness World Record attempts for most mouse clicks in one minute have produced averages of around 14–17 CPS when counting clicks over the full 60 seconds.
Burst CPS over 1 second is a different category — skilled players can hit 20–30+ CPS in a single second, but these numbers cannot be sustained. For practical Bedwars comparison, sustained 5-second or 10-second tests are more meaningful than 1-second burst numbers.
| Test Type | World-Class CPS | Technique Used |
|---|---|---|
| 1-second burst | 20–30+ CPS | Butterfly or drag clicking |
| 5-second sustained | 16–22 CPS | Butterfly clicking |
| 10-second sustained | 14–16 CPS | Jitter or butterfly clicking |
| 60-second sustained | ~14–17 CPS average | Guinness-style record attempts |
How to Improve Your CPS Score
Improving CPS is a combination of technique, hardware, and deliberate practice. Here are the most effective steps, ordered from highest to lowest impact for most players.
1. Use a Gaming Mouse
Optical gaming mice have shorter actuation distances and faster debounce times than office mice. A mouse with a 2ms debounce time can physically register more clicks per second than one with a 10ms debounce. If you are serious about CPS, a lightweight gaming mouse (under 80g) makes a meaningful difference at high click rates.
2. Warm Up Before Testing
Click speed improves significantly after 30–60 seconds of warm-up. Before taking a serious CPS test or entering a Bedwars lobby, do a quick 1-second burst to loosen your fingers. Many players report 1–2 CPS improvement just from warming up.
3. Learn Jitter Clicking (for 10–16 CPS)
Jitter clicking is the most accessible technique for reaching 12–16 CPS. To learn it: grip your mouse firmly with your whole hand, tense your forearm slightly, and transfer that tension to your clicking finger. The vibration comes from your arm muscle, not just your finger. Start with 5-second practice sets and rest between sessions.
Tip: Use the free CPS test in 5-second mode every day to track progress. Most players see measurable improvement within one week of daily 10-minute practice sessions.
4. Adjust Your Grip
A claw grip (fingertips on the buttons, palm arched above the mouse) gives more leverage for rapid clicking than a palm grip. Many high-CPS players use a claw or fingertip grip. Experiment with grip styles to find what allows the fastest, most consistent clicking for your hand size.
5. Track Progress with Consistent Testing
Always test under the same conditions: same mouse, same grip, same duration (5 seconds), and after a brief warm-up. CPS that varies wildly between sessions usually means your technique is not yet consistent — that is normal early in training. Consistency is more useful in Bedwars than a single high-score burst.
Measure Your CPS Now — Free
Take a baseline CPS test in 1, 5, 10, 15, 30, or 60-second modes. Runs entirely in your browser — no download, no sign-up required.
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