Service-specific latency

Test Your Ping to Cloudflare

Run a focused Cloudflare ping test and monitor how quickly your connection reaches a major global edge platform.

Session status

Idle

Single-target test against Cloudflare DNS (1.1.1.1).

Why test ping to Cloudflare?

Cloudflare sits close to users in many regions, which makes it a strong target for measuring edge latency. If your goal is to see how fast your internet reaches a globally distributed network, this page gives you a dedicated Cloudflare ping test with current results, history, and quality scoring.

Excellent

0-30 ms. Competitive play and voice chat feel immediate.

Good

31-60 ms. Most online games and live apps still feel smooth.

Playable

61-100 ms. Delay becomes easier to notice during faster reactions.

Poor

100+ ms. Expect lag, slower responses, and more visible instability.

A practical edge-network benchmark

Cloudflare is widely used for DNS, caching, security, and content delivery. Because of that footprint, latency to Cloudflare often reflects how quickly you can reach nearby internet infrastructure. This can make it a helpful benchmark when you want to separate local connection issues from problems that are isolated to a single app or game.

What high Cloudflare ping can mean

If your Cloudflare ping is consistently higher than expected, it may point to local wireless interference, last-mile ISP problems, or poor routing to your nearest edge location. Comparing this page with the Google ping page can also help. If both are high, your issue is likely broad. If only one is high, the route to that network may be the main factor.

How to act on the data

Use the continuous test to watch for latency spikes while streaming, gaming, or joining calls. Short bursts may signal background downloads or temporary congestion. If the graph stays noisy across multiple tests, try reducing Wi-Fi interference or checking whether the problem improves on another device. Trends matter more than a single isolated reading.