ToolboxHub

📶Internet Speed Test

Test your internet download and upload speed.

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Approximate only — measures download speed from a test endpoint. Results may vary based on CORS restrictions.

Click "Start Test" to measure your download speed

Speed Reference:

100+ Mbps — Excellent | 25-100 Mbps — Good | 10-25 Mbps — Fair | <10 Mbps — Slow

About Internet Speed Test

The Internet Speed Test measures your connection's download speed, upload speed, and latency directly from your browser, giving you an accurate picture of your current network performance. Use it to verify your ISP speeds, troubleshoot slow connections, or compare performance before and after network changes.

How to Use Internet Speed Test

  1. 1

    Start the speed test

    Click 'Start Test' to begin. The tool will first measure your ping (latency), then test download speed, then upload speed.

  2. 2

    Wait for results

    The test typically takes 30–60 seconds to complete. Avoid using other bandwidth-heavy applications during the test for the most accurate results.

  3. 3

    Review and compare your speeds

    View your download speed, upload speed, and latency results and compare them to your ISP's advertised plan speeds.

Common Use Cases

  • Verifying that your ISP is delivering the speeds you are paying for
  • Troubleshooting slow video calls, streaming, or file transfers
  • Comparing Wi-Fi versus wired connection speeds in your home or office
  • Testing internet speed from different locations in your building to find dead zones

Frequently Asked Questions

How does the speed test work?
The test downloads and uploads data samples to a test server and measures how quickly the data transfers to calculate your speed in Mbps. Latency (ping) is measured as the round-trip time to the server.
What is a good internet download speed?
For general browsing and streaming, 25 Mbps download is considered good. For 4K streaming, video calls, and gaming, 100 Mbps or more is recommended. For households with multiple simultaneous users, 200+ Mbps is ideal.
Why might my speed test result differ from my ISP's advertised speed?
Real-world speeds are affected by Wi-Fi signal strength, router quality, distance to the server, network congestion, and the number of devices sharing your connection. Running the test on a wired Ethernet connection gives the most accurate reading.

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