Track your website's speed from 50+ global locations. Identify slow regions and optimize performance before users complain.
Understand exactly how fast your website loads for users worldwide
Track Time To First Byte (TTFB) to understand server response performance. Identify backend bottlenecks affecting initial page load.
Visualize response time trends over hours, days, and weeks. Spot performance degradation before it impacts user experience.
Compare response times across 50+ global regions. Find out where your website is slow and needs optimization.
Set response time thresholds and get alerted when your website becomes slow. Configure different thresholds for different regions.
Automatically calculate performance baselines and detect anomalies. Know when response times deviate from normal patterns.
Track P50, P95, and P99 response times. Understand the experience of your median and tail-end users.
Get detailed latency insights from around the world
Enter any URL—website, API, or web service—that you want to measure for response time.
Choose monitoring locations based on where your users are. Cover all your key markets.
Define acceptable response times. Get alerted when latency exceeds your SLA targets.
Use detailed analytics to identify slow regions and optimize CDN, caching, or server locations.
A 1-second delay in page load can reduce conversions by 7%. Every millisecond matters for your bottom line.
Google uses page speed as a ranking factor. Slow websites rank lower in search results, reducing organic traffic.
53% of mobile users abandon sites that take longer than 3 seconds to load. Fast sites keep users engaged.
Your website might be fast locally but slow for international users. Monitor from where your actual users are located.
Tip: Consider adding a CDN edge in Asia-Pacific to improve response times.
Common questions about response time monitoring
We measure the total time from when our probe initiates the HTTP request until the complete response is received. This includes DNS lookup, TCP connection, TLS handshake (for HTTPS), and server processing time. We also separately report TTFB (Time To First Byte) for more granular analysis.
Generally, aim for under 200ms TTFB and under 1 second total response time for optimal user experience. For API endpoints, under 100ms is ideal. However, acceptable thresholds vary by use case—a static landing page should be faster than a complex dashboard with database queries.
Absolutely! You can monitor any URL including REST API endpoints, GraphQL endpoints, or webhook receivers. Configure custom HTTP methods (GET, POST, PUT), headers, and request bodies to accurately measure your API performance.
Response times naturally vary due to network conditions, server load, and other factors. We provide statistical analysis including median (P50), 95th percentile (P95), and 99th percentile (P99) to help you understand both typical and worst-case performance.
Yes! Our dashboard provides side-by-side regional comparisons with world maps and bar charts. Easily identify which regions have slower response times and need optimization. This data helps you make informed decisions about CDN placement and server locations.
Get detailed response time insights from 50+ global locations. Know exactly how fast your website loads for users everywhere.