Bluetooth Test Online: Check Browser Support, Availability & Picker
Use this browser-based Bluetooth test to verify browser support, confirm whether Bluetooth is currently available to the browser, and check whether the page can open the Bluetooth picker and return a device.
Browser status
Bluetooth Test
Check whether this browser session can use Web Bluetooth, whether Bluetooth is currently available, and whether a user-opened picker can return a device.
Current Bluetooth status
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LoadingChecking whether this browser session exposes Bluetooth support and whether the current context is eligible to use it.
You must interact with the browser picker yourself. This page cannot silently list nearby or previously paired devices.
Browser support
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Secure context
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Bluetooth availability
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Selected device
None selected
Latest device result
The browser path looks usable, but you still need to open the picker and select a device to confirm the permission flow end to end.
- Device name
- None selected
- Device identifier
- None selected
- GATT object
- Not present
No device has been selected yet. Use the picker to confirm whether the browser can request a Bluetooth device from this page.
What this result means
- Support alone does not guarantee your operating system or Bluetooth controls are ready.
- If the picker opens, browser permissions and secure-context requirements are already in a better state than before.
- Use a second pass after changing browser, OS setting, or Bluetooth state to compare the result.
What this test cannot confirm
- It cannot measure signal strength, transfer speed, latency, codec quality, or connection stability.
- It cannot read system pairing history, firmware details, drivers, or manufacturer diagnostics.
- It only reports what the current browser session exposes through the Web Bluetooth flow.
Why run a Bluetooth test online
An online Bluetooth test is useful when Bluetooth pairing fails and you need a fast browser-level answer before blaming drivers, hardware, or the device itself. It helps separate three common problems: browsers that do not support Web Bluetooth, pages that are not running in a secure context, and systems where Bluetooth exists but is currently unavailable to the browser.
How the test runs
This page first checks whether the current browser exposes Bluetooth support at all. On supported browsers, it verifies secure-context requirements, asks the browser whether Bluetooth is available right now, and lets you open the browser Bluetooth picker with a user click. If you choose a device, the page reports the device identifier the browser returns. It does not silently scan nearby devices or read your system pairing list in the background.
How to interpret results
The most important distinction is between support, availability, and successful selection. A supported browser only means Web Bluetooth exists. Availability tells you whether the browser currently thinks Bluetooth can be used. A successful device selection confirms that the picker opened and the page received a device from the browser, but it still does not prove full pairing health, transfer quality, or audio performance.
- If support is missing, the problem is the browser or platform, not the picker on this page.
- If support exists but availability is unavailable, Bluetooth may be turned off, blocked, or inaccessible to the browser right now.
- If the picker opens and returns a device, the permission flow is working at the browser level.
- If you cancel the picker, that does not indicate a fault. It only means no device was selected.
- This tool does not measure signal strength, latency, codec quality, battery level, or transfer speed.
The check runs entirely in the browser and only reports what the Web Bluetooth flow exposes in the current session. It does not read firmware, drivers, manufacturer diagnostics, or private pairing history, and it does not store personal data.