Mouse Double Click Test: Check Switch Bounce In Your Browser
Click Mouse double click test Test left, right, and middle buttons separately to spot accidental double-clicks, worn switches, and suspiciously short repeat intervals.
Left button
Click this area with the left button several times. Intentional fast doubles are tracked separately from suspected accidental doubles.
- Normal clicks
- 0
- Double clicks
- 0
- Last interval
- -
- Last activity
- -
Right button
Use repeated right-clicks in this area. The tester separates normal rapid pairs from very short intervals that look suspicious.
- Normal clicks
- 0
- Double clicks
- 0
- Last interval
- -
- Last activity
- -
Middle button
Press the middle button or wheel here several times to compare intentional fast repeats against suspected switch bounce.
- Normal clicks
- 0
- Double clicks
- 0
- Last interval
- -
- Last activity
- -
Why run a mouse double-click test online
A mouse double-click test helps you check whether one press is being detected once or twice in the browser. That matters when folders open unexpectedly, text selections break, drag actions feel unreliable, or a worn switch starts bouncing after months of use. This page gives you a fast way to test left, right, and middle buttons separately before changing settings or replacing the mouse.
How the test works
Each test pad listens to one mouse button only. When two presses arrive inside the repeat window, the tool measures the interval between them. Extremely short intervals are flagged as suspected accidental doubles, while longer rapid pairs are treated separately so intentional fast clicking is less likely to look like a hardware fault. The page also shows the last measured interval and the last time each button was active.
How to interpret results
If suspected accidental doubles keep rising while you believe you are clicking once, the switch may be bouncing or wearing out. If your single-click count rises normally and suspected doubles stay low, the button is probably behaving as expected. Test each button individually because left, right, and middle switches can fail at different times.
- High suspected accidental doubles suggest switch bounce or unstable contact worth investigating.
- Rapid repeated clicks alone do not automatically mean the mouse is faulty.
- Different results between buttons usually point to one failing switch rather than a whole-mouse issue.
- Browser and OS behavior can influence timing, so compare results across more than one environment if needed.
This tool reports browser-level mouse input only. It does not read firmware debounce settings, hardware telemetry, switch electrical characteristics, or your operating system's exact double-click threshold.