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Network Throttle Simulator - Online Slow 3G & Offline Test

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Network Throttle Simulator

Simulate Slow 3G, Fast 3G, 4G, WiFi, and Offline conditions. Test how websites perform under different network speeds.

Offline
No Connection
Slow 3G
400 Kbps ¡ 400ms
Fast 3G
1.5 Mbps ¡ 150ms
4G LTE
10 Mbps ¡ 50ms
WiFi
50 Mbps ¡ 20ms
Custom
Adjust Below
Slow 3G 400 Kbps 400 Kbps RTT: 400ms Loss: 0%
Custom Parameters
400 Kbps
400 Kbps
400 ms
0%

Effective Download Speed

50
KB/s
~0.4 Mbps | 1MB in ~20s | 10MB in ~200s
Very Slow
Website Load Test

Enter a URL to load in the test frame. The load time is measured to compare against simulated network conditions.

Enter a URL and click Load to test
Data Transfer Simulator

Simulate downloading a file under the selected network conditions to see how long it takes.

Page Load Time Comparison

Estimated time to load pages of different sizes under various network conditions (download only, excluding latency).

Network Speed 500 KB 2 MB 5 MB 10 MB
Offline 0 Kbps ∞ N/A
Slow 3G 400 Kbps 10.0s 40.0s 100.0s 200.0s
Fast 3G 1.5 Mbps 2.7s 10.7s 26.7s 53.3s
4G LTE 10 Mbps 0.4s 1.6s 4.0s 8.0s
WiFi 50 Mbps 0.08s 0.32s 0.8s 1.6s
Current 400 Kbps 10.0s 40.0s 100.0s 200.0s
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Network Throttling and why is it useful?
Network throttling is the intentional slowing down of internet connection speed to simulate real-world conditions like 3G, 4G, or spotty WiFi. It's extremely useful for web developers to test how their websites perform for users with slower connections. By identifying bottlenecks early, developers can optimize loading times, improve user experience, and ensure their sites are accessible to a global audience with varying network quality.
What are the exact specifications of Slow 3G?
Slow 3G (as defined by Chrome DevTools) has a download speed of 400 Kbps (50 KB/s), upload speed of 400 Kbps (50 KB/s), and a round-trip latency (RTT) of 400 milliseconds. This simulates a poor 3G connection found in rural areas or developing regions. Under these conditions, a typical 2MB webpage would take approximately 40 seconds to download (not including additional latency overhead).
How does Fast 3G differ from Slow 3G?
Fast 3G offers significantly better performance with 1.5 Mbps (187.5 KB/s) download, 750 Kbps (93.75 KB/s) upload, and 150ms RTT. This represents a good HSPA+ connection. Compared to Slow 3G, Fast 3G downloads data about 3.75x faster and has less than half the latency, making web browsing noticeably smoother while still being far slower than 4G or broadband.
Can I truly simulate network throttling in a browser?
For the most accurate network throttling simulation, we recommend using Chrome DevTools (Network tab → Throttling) or Firefox Developer Tools. These browser-level tools can actually intercept and delay network requests. Our online tool helps you understand the theoretical performance impact and provides educational comparisons. For real throttling, you can also use tools like Charles Proxy, Fiddler, or operating system-level solutions like Network Link Conditioner on macOS.
What is a good page load time target for slow connections?
Google recommends that pages load within 3 seconds on a 3G connection. For Slow 3G (50 KB/s), this means your critical resources should be under ~150 KB total. Best practices include: minimizing JavaScript bundles, optimizing images (using WebP/AVIF formats), implementing lazy loading, using a CDN, enabling compression (gzip/brotli), and leveraging browser caching. Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) can also greatly improve the experience on slow networks by serving cached content instantly.
What does the Offline mode simulate?
Offline mode simulates a complete loss of network connectivity. This is crucial for testing how your web application behaves when the user has no internet connection. Progressive Web Apps (PWAs) with Service Workers can cache resources and provide offline functionality. Testing offline behavior helps ensure your app displays a meaningful offline message, caches important data, and gracefully handles network failures without crashing or showing confusing errors.
How does packet loss affect network performance?
Packet loss occurs when data packets fail to reach their destination, requiring retransmission. Even 1-2% packet loss can drastically reduce effective throughput because TCP interprets lost packets as congestion and reduces its sending rate. On wireless networks, packet loss of 0.5-5% is common. For real-time applications like video calls or online gaming, packet loss above 1% causes noticeable quality degradation. Our simulator includes packet loss to help you understand its compounding effect with latency and bandwidth limitations.
Why do different websites load at different speeds on the same network?
Several factors affect loading speed beyond raw bandwidth: server response time (Time to First Byte), number of HTTP requests, resource sizes (images, scripts, stylesheets), DNS lookup time, TLS/SSL handshake overhead, and geographic distance to the server. Well-optimized websites use techniques like resource minification, image compression, CDN distribution, HTTP/2 or HTTP/3 multiplexing, and efficient caching strategies to load faster even on slow connections.