GBtoolhub

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How to Use

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Speed Test

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Mbps
Press Start to test
Download
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Mbps
Upload
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Mbps
Ping
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ms
~
Jitter
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ms

Note: Results are estimates and may vary based on network conditions.

What Is an Internet Speed Test?

An internet speed test measures your connection's performance by testing download speed, upload speed, ping (latency), and jitter. It connects to nearby servers and measures how fast data transfers to and from your device. Results are shown in Mbps (megabits per second). Use this before and after changing internet plans or troubleshooting slow connections.

Common Internet Speeds

ActivityRecommended Speed
Basic Browsing (1–5 Mbps)1–5 Mbps
SD Video Streaming (5–10 Mbps)5–10 Mbps
HD Video Streaming (25 Mbps)25 Mbps
4K Video Streaming (50 Mbps)50 Mbps
Online Gaming (25–100 Mbps)25–100 Mbps
Remote Work / Video Calls (10–50 Mbps)10–50 Mbps

Actual speeds vary based on network congestion, WiFi signal strength, distance from router, and server location. Run the test 2–3 times at different times of day for the most accurate picture.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does a browser speed test work?

The browser speed test downloads and uploads test files through your web browser using WebRTC or XMLHttpRequest. It measures the time it takes to transfer a known amount of data and calculates the speed in Mbps. No software installation is needed.

What's the difference between Mbps and MB/s?

Mbps (megabits per second) measures internet speed. MB/s (megabytes per second) measures file download speed. 1 MB/s = 8 Mbps. So a 100 Mbps connection downloads files at up to 12.5 MB/s.

Why is my WiFi speed slower than my plan?

WiFi speed is affected by signal interference, distance from router, walls and floors, network congestion, and whether your devices support the latest WiFi standards (WiFi 6 vs WiFi 5). For the most accurate result, connect your device directly to the router with an Ethernet cable.

What is a good ping/latency?

Ping under 20 ms is excellent for gaming. Under 100 ms is fine for video calls and general browsing. Above 200 ms makes real-time gaming frustrating. Jitter (variation in ping) should be under 30 ms for stable performance.

Upload vs download — why are they different?

Most home internet plans are asymmetric — they prioritize download bandwidth because most activities (streaming, web browsing, social media) are download-heavy. Upload speed becomes more important for video calls, cloud backups, and live streaming.