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PWM Flicker Test

Monitor Flicker Test

Detect PWM-based backlight flickering that can cause eye strain and headaches. If you see visible flickering at low frequencies, your monitor uses PWM dimming.

This test displays rapidly alternating images. Stop immediately if you experience discomfort, dizziness, or eye strain. Do not use the strobe mode if you have photosensitive epilepsy.
Press Start to begin flicker test

About This Flicker Test

This tool simulates flickering patterns at different frequencies using requestAnimationFrame. Because the test pattern is rendered by the browser at your display's refresh rate, the actual flicker effect you see is limited by your monitor's Hz. At test frequencies above half your monitor's refresh rate, the pattern will appear as a blended gray. The motion ruler mode shows horizontal moving bars — if your monitor uses PWM dimming, the bars may appear as repeated bright/dark bands due to stroboscopic interaction with the backlight.

PWM Frequency by Monitor Type

Budget LCD (PWM)

High Risk
100–500 Hz

Low-frequency PWM visible to many users. Significant eye strain potential at low brightness.

Premium LCD (PWM)

Low Risk
1000–3600 Hz

High-frequency PWM. Generally imperceptible, but may still affect very sensitive users.

Flicker-Free LCD (DC)

No Flicker
No PWM

DC dimming at all brightness levels. Zero flicker. Recommended for extended use sessions.

OLED Displays

Variable
240–3000 Hz

Self-emitting pixels use PWM for dimming. Some OLED monitors offer high-frequency PWM modes.

Monitor Flicker Test FAQ

Common questions about PWM dimming, flicker-free monitors, and eye strain.