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Azure Speed Test

Latency test

Test Steps
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Important note

Important note

This site gives a quick, indicative view of latency to Azure regions from your location, use it for initial guidance, not for SLAs or final performance decisions. For more accurate measurements, visit PsPing Network Latency Test.

Frequently asked questions

What is latency and what constitutes good latency?

Latency, often referred to as ping, is the duration for data to travel from the source to the destination and back. The results of this test represent the median round trip time (RTT) latency to Azure storage endpoints, with lower RTT indicating superior performance.

What constitutes good latency? Good latency varies by application type:

  • Real-time applications (e.g., gaming, video conferencing): latency below 50 ms is ideal.
  • Interactive applications (e.g., web browsing, online trading): latency between 50 ms and 100 ms is usually acceptable.
  • Non-interactive applications (e.g., file transfers, backups): latency above 100 ms may be acceptable.

These guidelines may vary depending on specific application needs and user expectations.

How does Azure Latency Test work?

Your browser sends HTTPS requests to Azure storage files in each region. The median latency is calculated by measuring the time between the request and the response.

Does the latency test reflect actual application performance?

Partially. This test is a network-focused indicator, not a full application benchmark.

  • Good for comparing relative latency between Azure regions
  • Useful for region-selection discussions
  • Not a substitute for application-level load or performance testing

Use this test as a signal for initial guidance, not as the sole decision-maker.

Is my speed test result private?

Yes. AzureSpeed does not require authentication and does not collect personal or corporate identity information. Test results are generated entirely in your browser and are only visible to you. Other users cannot view, discover, or search for your results unless you explicitly share them (e.g., via screenshot). Results are not published, stored, or retained on our servers.

Do you support upload, download tests, packet loss, and jitter?

Upload tests are available here. Download tests are available here. Currently, measuring packet loss or jitter is not supported.

Why might my Azure Latency Test result differ from my PSPing result?

Browser-based latency tests include additional overhead that PSPing does not measure. This test uses HTTPS requests which include:

  • DNS resolution time
  • TLS/SSL handshake negotiation
  • HTTP request/response header processing
  • Browser JavaScript execution overhead

PSPing measures raw TCP or ICMP echo requests with minimal overhead. Expect browser results to be higher than PSPing. Both are valid — this test reflects real-world browser application latency, while PSPing shows pure network latency.

Why are some Azure regions not listed?

Some regions may not appear due to special access requirements or restrictions for certain users or organizations. For example, US government regions require approval from the US government, and the Australia Central region is limited to Australian and New Zealand government organizations and their partners. Additionally, some regions might be too new and not yet included in the test. If you notice a missing recently announced region, please open an issue on GitHub .