Troubleshooting
If a single press creates multiple events, that is often switch bounce rather than your clicking technique. Compare several runs and watch for repeated intervals under about 50 ms from one press. Software debounce can mask the issue, but persistent bounce usually indicates switch wear.
Pro tip
If you recently changed drivers or macros, disable them temporarily and re-test for raw input.
Common symptoms
- Clicks registering twice
- Bounce under 50 ms
- Inconsistent click timing
Mouse double click debounce tester gives you a quick baseline for accidental doubles and click interval timing. You usually notice it when folders open twice, a weapon fires unexpectedly, or drag-and-drop drops the item mid-drag. This page measures click events and the time between them, so you can see what is happening instead of guessing.
Do a few normal single clicks in the test area, then try the same pattern with lighter pressure. If you see extra events with very short gaps, that often points to switch bounce, often called debounce issues, meaning the contact inside the button is chattering. If the results look clean but you still get unwanted doubles in apps, your debounce settings in software, OS double-click speed, driver profiles, or macros may be the real cause. Also look for consistency: accidental doubles during slow, careful clicks are a stronger hardware signal than doubles only during rapid spam clicking.
To get a fair read from this mouse double click debounce tester, keep your setup simple. Close auto-clickers, disable mouse macros temporarily, and test in a second browser tab if you suspect an extension is interfering. If you can, plug into a different USB port and repeat the same clicks, consistency matters more than a single run. A quick wipe around the button and a blast of air can also help if dust is causing intermittent behavior.
If the extra clicks follow you across different PCs or browsers, the hardware is the likely bottleneck and you may need repair or a switch swap. If the problem disappears after changing settings, you can keep using the mouse and just tune it. For more input checks, use the input hub at Input tests and return to the main tool page at mouse double click tool when you want to re-run the mouse double click debounce tester after a change.