Mouse Polling Rate for APEX (Hz Check)

Run a quick polling rate check online and confirm your USB mode and driver settings.

Current Rate
0 Hz
Peak Rate
0 Hz
Average (1s)
0 Hz
MOVE MOUSE HERE Keep moving in wide circles to measure maximum Hz

Troubleshooting

Before playing APEX, confirm your mouse polling rate is stable and close to your target (for example 500Hz or 1000Hz). If you see jitter or dips, use a direct USB port, avoid hubs, and compare wired vs wireless mode. If stutter persists in-game, try lowering polling rate to reduce CPU overhead and compare frame pacing.

Pro tip

Close overlays and input remappers, then repeat the test to compare stability.

Common symptoms

  • Input feels inconsistent
  • Micro-stutter in aim
  • Wireless jitter spikes

Mouse polling rate apex is a repeatable baseline, it shows how consistent your reported Hz is during normal movement. For APEX, stability matters more than a headline number. tracking feels inconsistent in Apex, the cursor feels a bit floaty, or you changed a driver setting and want proof it actually applied.

Let the test run for 10 to 20 seconds, then judge the typical range. A stable line usually feels more predictable than a setup that jumps between low and high values. If the reading looks lower than expected, the most common causes are a capped profile in mouse software, a USB hub or dock, power saving, or a wireless mode that trades latency for battery.

To get a clean result from this mouse polling rate apex, keep it simple: plug directly into a USB port, close overlays, recording tools, and input filters, and avoid input remappers while you test. If you are on wireless, compare wired versus your dongle mode, and if you use Bluetooth, expect lower numbers and more jitter on some setups. Also try a second browser and repeat the same hand movement, consistency matters more than chasing the highest peak.

Once you have a stable baseline, change one thing at a time and re-run the test. If higher Hz makes your game feel better, keep it, but if you notice stutter or uneven frame pacing, dropping from 1000 to 500 can be a sensible compromise on older CPUs. For more input checks, use the input hub at Input tests, and if clicks feel odd in addition to motion, pair this with the mouse double click test. After each change, come back to the mouse polling rate apex to confirm the setting you think you applied is what the PC is actually receiving.

FAQ

Does higher polling rate increase FPS drops?

On some systems, very high polling rates can add CPU overhead. If you notice stutter, try 500Hz vs 1000Hz and compare in-game frame pacing.

What is mouse polling rate?

Polling rate is how often the mouse reports its position to the computer, measured in Hz. Higher Hz can reduce input delay, but stability matters.