Browser to server test

Internet Speed Test

Measure ping, jitter, download, upload, route quality, and practical readiness between your browser and the ToolsMagicPro server.

Test server Detecting... Nearest ISP speed tests can show higher numbers than this route.
You are testing on localhost. This measures browser-to-local-app speed, not your public internet speed. Use the deployed site for a real route test.
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Download--Mbps
Upload--Mbps
Ping--ms
Jitter--ms
Detecting...
Route noteNot tested yet
Confidence--
Data used--
Connection quality

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Measurement samples

How the result was calculated

Important: Ookla usually selects a nearby ISP server, so it can show your best local ISP speed. This tool measures your path to the ToolsMagicPro server. Server distance, hosting bandwidth, HTTPS overhead, Wi-Fi, VPN, and route congestion can make this result lower.

Check Your Internet Speed in Seconds

Use this internet speed test to measure how your connection is performing right now. The tool checks key network signals including download speed, upload speed, ping and jitter, giving you a clearer view of how smooth your connection is for browsing, streaming, video calls, gaming, uploads and daily online work.

Results can change depending on your Wi-Fi strength, device performance, network traffic, router quality, VPN usage and the distance between your browser and the test server. For the most useful result, run the test more than once and compare the average.

What This Internet Speed Test Measures

Download Speed

Download speed shows how quickly data reaches your device. It affects streaming quality, website loading, file downloads, app updates and general browsing.

Upload Speed

Upload speed shows how quickly your device sends data online. It matters for sending large files, cloud backups, live streaming, video calls and uploading media.

Ping

Ping measures response time in milliseconds. A lower ping usually means a more responsive connection, which is useful for online gaming, calls and real-time apps.

Jitter

Jitter shows how much your connection response time changes during the test. Lower jitter usually means a steadier connection with fewer interruptions.

How to Read Your Speed Test Result

A good result depends on what you use the internet for. Basic browsing and messaging need less speed, while 4K streaming, large downloads, remote work, online backups and multiple connected devices need a stronger connection.

Online Activity What Matters Most
Browsing and email Stable download speed and low ping
Video calls Good upload speed, low ping and low jitter
Streaming Strong download speed and steady connection
Gaming Low ping and low jitter
Cloud uploads Reliable upload speed

How to Get a More Accurate Result

Before starting the test, close unnecessary apps, pause downloads, disconnect unused devices and move closer to your router if you are using Wi-Fi. For the most stable reading, test with an Ethernet cable where possible.

Run the test at different times of the day. Evening results may be lower when more people are using the same network or when your provider’s local network is busy.

When You Should Run an Internet Speed Test

  • When websites or apps feel slower than usual.
  • Before an important video meeting or online class.
  • After changing your router, package or provider.
  • When streaming keeps buffering.
  • When online games feel delayed or unstable.
  • When checking whether your current plan is suitable for your home or office.

Mini Guide: Why Internet Speed Changes During the Day

Internet speed is not always fixed. Your connection can feel fast in the morning and slower in the evening because more people may be using the same provider network at peak times. Inside your home, speed can also drop when several devices are streaming, downloading, gaming or backing up files at the same time.

Wi-Fi signal strength is another common reason for lower results. Walls, distance from the router, older devices and interference from nearby networks can all reduce performance. A device connected close to the router may show a better result than one used in another room.

Ping and jitter are just as important as download speed for real-time activity. A connection with high download speed can still feel poor for gaming or video calls if the response time is unstable. That is why a full test should look at download, upload, ping and jitter together.

Internet Speed Test FAQs

What is a good internet speed?

A good speed depends on your usage. Light browsing needs less speed, while streaming, gaming, large downloads and multiple users need a faster and more stable connection.

Why is my speed test result lower than my package speed?

Package speed is often the maximum available under ideal conditions. Your actual result can be affected by Wi-Fi signal, router quality, device performance, network congestion, VPN use and server distance.

Is download speed more important than upload speed?

Download speed matters most for browsing, streaming and downloading files. Upload speed matters more for video calls, file sharing, online backups and live streaming.

What does ping mean in a speed test?

Ping is the time it takes for your device to get a response from the server. Lower ping usually means a faster response, which is important for gaming, calls and real-time online activity.

Why should I test more than once?

A single test can be affected by temporary network activity. Running the test a few times gives a better idea of your normal connection performance.

Test Your Connection Now

Start the test, wait for the results and compare download speed, upload speed, ping and jitter. If the numbers look unusually low, try again after closing background apps or moving closer to your router.