Speedtest

Speedtest by Ookla® is the definitive way to measure the performance and quality of mobile and fixed broadband network connections. With billions of daily performance samples capturing speed, latency, coverage, and quality of experience, our data delivers real-world insights into how users experience connectivity when and where it matters most. This accurate, unbiased view of global connectivity empowers operators, governments, regulators, and businesses to drive advancements that make connections faster, more reliable, and better for all.

55B+ Consumer-initiated Tests

55+ billion consumer-initiated tests taken to date

15K+ Global Testing Servers

15,000+ testing servers around the globe

600MM+ App Installs

600+ million app installs to date

Global Reach of Ookla Speedtest

Speedtest is available in 17 languages worldwide via the web at and our many native , including in the following languages:

Recent News

Morningstar  
"Patients today face a complex healthcare landscape, and finding the right physician can feel overwhelming," said Steve Leibforth, Managing Director of Castle Connolly. "The Top Doctor recognition represents more than an honor-it's a mark of trust, signaling to patients that these physicians have earned recognition from their peers for clinical expertise, compassionate care, and professional excellence. In an era of uncertainty, that assurance matters more than ever."
Yahoo! Finance  
¶¶ÒõÆÆ½â°æ, Inc. (NASDAQ: ZD), today announced its participation in one investor conference in February: Susquehanna 15th Annual Technology Conference.
USA Today  
Baby names inspired by places such as London and Dallas, and names that start with D and K are on their way out and will be heard less in 2026, new research by BabyCenter has found. The digital parenting resource, that has been publishing reports on baby names since 2004, in a news release Jan. 13, said it "analyzed a year’s worth of baby name data to identify names experiencing the steepest drops in popularity to see which names parents are leaning away from at large, and could be facing extinction."
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