Ghosting Test

Check for trailing blur, overshoot and inverse ghosting on moving objects. This is especially useful for gaming monitors with overdrive settings.

Hardware Refresh Rate: Calculating...

Read the detailed guide and interpretation tips

What the ghosting test tells you

Ghosting appears when pixels cannot change fast enough during motion. You may see a dark trail, a blurry smear or a bright halo behind fast-moving objects depending on response time and overdrive tuning.

Use this page to compare different refresh rates, overdrive modes and picture presets. The same panel can look clean in one mode and show heavy overshoot in another.

How to read the result

Use the focused test first, then confirm what you see on at least one or two additional steps. A single quick glance can be misleading on glossy panels, OLED screens or displays with strong reflections.

Related tests you should also try

UFO Ghosting & Overdrive

Track fast moving objects and look for trailing blur or inverse ghosting halos.

Response Time / Input Lag Demo

See how quickly the display reacts to a click or key press.

Screen Tearing (V-Sync)

Watch for horizontal tears when a fast line moves across the screen.

Viewing Angle Washout

Look from the sides to spot brightness and color shifts.

Frequently asked questions

Ghosting is a visible trail or smear that follows moving objects because pixels do not transition fast enough from one color to another.

Inverse ghosting is a bright or discolored halo caused by overdrive being too aggressive. It is also called overshoot or corona in some monitor menus.

Yes. Higher refresh rates can change the way response-time artifacts look, so it is useful to test at 60 Hz, 120 Hz, 144 Hz or whatever modes your monitor supports.

Yes. A browser-based ghosting test is a quick way to compare presets, although final perception also depends on real games, motion processing and the display panel itself.

Starting Test

Please wait...

Move your mouse to reveal the control panel. Press ESC to quit.