How fast should a website load in 2021?

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How fast should a website load in 2021?

Key Findings:

  1. In short, your website should load as fast as possible!
  2. The ideal website load time for mobile sites is 1-2 seconds.
  3. 53% of mobile site visits are abandoned if pages take longer than 3 seconds to load.
  4. A 2-second delay in load time resulted in abandonment rates of up to 87%.
  5. Google itself aims for under half-a-second load time
  6. A VERY SLOW SITE can be a NEGATIVE Google Ranking factor.
  7. The average load time for mobile sites is 19 seconds over 3G connections. Models predict that publishers whose mobile sites load in 5 seconds earn up to 2x more mobile ad revenue than those whose sites load in 19 seconds.
  8. People would not return to websites that took longer than four seconds to load and formed a “negative perception” of a company with a badly put-together site or would tell their family and friends about their experiences.
  9. Slow load times are a primary reason visitors abandon a checkout process.
  10. In studies, Page Time Load goes from 1s to 3s – the probability of bounce increases 32%.
  11. In studies, Page Time Load goes from 1s to 5s – the probability of bounce increases 90%.
  12. In studies, Page Time Load goes from 1s to 6s – the probability of bounce increases 106%.
  13. In studies, Page Time Load goes from 1s to 10s – the probability of bounce increases 123%.
  14. In a recent study, the average load time for a web page was 3.21s.
  15. In a recent study, the average load time for a mobile web page is 22 seconds.
  16. For every 100ms decrease in homepage load speed, a company’s customer base saw a 1.11% lift in session based conversion
  17. Users read fewer articles each day whilst experiencing delays loading each web page. The speed of the site negatively impacts a user’s session depth, no matter how small the delay.
  18. Two thirds of UK consumers (67%) cite slow loading times as the main reason they would abandon an online purchase.
  19. 47 percent of consumers expect a web page to load in two seconds or less.
  20. 40 percent of consumers will wait no more than three seconds for a web page to render before abandoning the site
  21. 52 percent of online shoppers stated that quick page loading is important to their site loyalty.
  22. Shoppers often become distracted when made to wait for a page to load. 14 percent will begin shopping at another site, and 23 percent will stop shopping or walk away from their computer.
  23. Remember to optimize your images – the most important thing you can do to decrease download times. Load background images via external CSS. Minimise white space, line returns and comment tags. Remove unnecessary META tags and META content. Minimise unnecessary java script and other client-side scripting.  A technical approach to improving user experience, it seems to me, would begin with site speed.
  24. A faster site should improve visitor satisfaction levels and the number of conversions.
  25. Google might crawl your site slower if you have a very slow site (confirmed by Google).
  26. Retail and travel sites – 79 percent of online shoppers who experience a dissatisfying visit are less likely to buy from that site again. 64 percent would simply purchase from another online store.
  27. Automotive retail sites take on average 6 seconds to load.
  28. Customer packaged goods sites take on average 6.1 seconds to load.
  29. Finance sites take on average 5.1 seconds to load.
  30. Healthcare sites take on average 5.6 seconds to load.
  31. Media sites take on average 5.5 seconds to load.
  32. Retail sites take on average 6 seconds to load.
  33. Technology sites take on average 6.8 seconds to load.
  34. Travel sites take on average 6.7 seconds to load.
  35. Improving your desktop site speed score in isolation of developing a compelling user experience, will not magically lead to BETTER rankings in Google in the short term.
  36. Rankings is a nuanced process and there is over 200 signals, but now speed is one of them. Know that ‘content’ and relevance’ are still primary. Website and page load speed may affect Google rankings, just not as much as high quality links, good titles & content that satisfies a search engine visitors’ intent.

Join our Free SEO training course to find out more.

Read for a more meandering look at how site speed affects visitor satisfaction rates and your bottom line.

Every second does count

QUOTE: “there have been studies by Akamai who found that two seconds is actually the threshold for e-commerce site  acceptability. Meaning that that’s what users like to shop with. At Google, we aim for under a half second.” Maile Ohye, Google, 2010

People like fast sites.

And so does Google. In fact, Google likes blistering fast sites so much it has moved to what it is calling a ‘mobile-first‘ index .

QUOTE: “Speed is definitely a ranking factor? YES.” John Mueller, Google 2019

‘Site Speed’, we are told by Google in the above quote, is a ranking factor. But as with any factor, Google confirms is a ranking signal, it’s usually a small, ‘nuanced’ one.

Bing wants fast sites too:

QUOTE: “Page load time: Slow page load times can lead a visitor to leave your website, potentially before the content has even loaded, to seek information elsewhere. Bing may view this as a poor user experience and an unsatisfactory search result. Faster page loads are always better, but webmasters should balance absolute page load speed with a positive, useful user experience.” Bing Webmaster Guidelines 2020

How fast should websites load? Well, there isn’t a specific threshold, as such;

QUOTE: “So we have hypothetical data and practical data so we don’t really have a threshold to give away but basically the recommendation I would say is just make sites fast for users that’s what it boils down to.” Martin Splitt, Google, 2019

hFXyP data page load time statistics download

A fast site is a good user experience (UX), and a satisfying UX leads to higher conversions.

QUOTE: “How fast your website loads is critical but often a completely ignored element in any online business and that includes search marketing and search engine optimisation. And that includes page load times on mobile devices: The average time it takes to fully load a mobile landing page is 22 seconds, according to a new analysis. Yet 53% of visits are abandoned if a mobile site takes longer than three seconds to load. That’s a big problem.” Dainial An, Google, 2017

Very slow sites are a bad user experience – and Google is all about good user experience these days.

The fact is, a faster website is a net positive to everyone, from Google to your customer. If you have a web team and don’t know what else to do (and you’ve maximised other areas of opportunity for the time being) instruct your developers to improve the speed of your website for you and Google’s users.

Screenshot 2015-05-14 01.02.07

Is website speed a Google ranking factor?

‘How much is a very slow site a negative ranking factor’, historically, has been a more useful interpretation of the claim that ‘website speed is a Google ranking factor‘.

A SLOW SITE can be a NEGATIVE Ranking factor.

I have clearly witnessed very slow websites (of 10 seconds and more) negatively impacted in Google, and second, from statements made by Googlers:

QUOTE: “We do say we have a small factor in there for pages that are really slow to load where we take that into account.” John Mueller, Google, 2015

Google might crawl your site slower if you have a slow site. And that’s really bad – especially if you are adding lots of new content or making lots of edits to content on the site.

QUOTE: “We’re seeing an extremely high response-time for requests made to your site (at times, over 2 seconds to fetch a single URL). This has resulted in us severely limiting the number of URLs we’ll crawl from your site.” John Mueller, Google, 2015

John specifically said 2 seconds disrupts CRAWLING activity, not RANKING ability, but you get the picture.

John Mueller recently declared:

QUOTE: “RE: [the speed of a page] So we do say we have a small factor in there for pages that are really slow to load where we take that into account.” John Mueller, Google, 2015

and

QUOTE“Make sure they [web pages] load fast, for your users. I aim for less than 2-3 secs”John Mueller, Google, 2016

and from another Googler when asked about a site that was loading in 5 seconds:

QUOTE: “I wouldn’t worry about it too much. Make it as fast as you reasonably can.” Gary Illyes, Google, 2016

and

QUOTE: “I guess there are two aspects here when you look at server speed.  On the one hand there’s the kind of perceived speed in the browser, in the time it takes to render a page, and that is something that is definitely a ranking factor, it’s probably not the biggest ranking factor. And usually we try to differentiate between sites that are really slow, and sites that are kind of normal.  So just optimizing on a millisecond basis is not going to affect anything in the search results…. the other part of server speed is more in regards to crawling, so how quickly we can crawl pages from your website, and that’s not directly a ranking factor, but it does affect how quickly we can pick up new and changed content on your site.” John Mueller, Google, 2016

In 2017 Google has stated, with regards to crawling and indexing your site:

QUOTE: “For Googlebot a speedy site is a sign of healthy servers, so it can get more content over the same number of connections. On the flip side, a significant number of 5xx errors or connection timeouts signal the opposite, and crawling slows down.” Gary Illyes,  Google, 2017

With regards to the ‘mobile-first index‘, Google did not immediately use mobile speed as a ranking factor, but it was later confirmed by Google that site speed was now a ranking factor on mobile sites :

QUOTE: “starting in July 2018, page speed will be a ranking factor for mobile searches. The “Speed Update,” as we’re calling it, will only affect pages that deliver the slowest experience to users and will only affect a small percentage of queries. It applies the same standard to all pages, regardless of the technology used to build the page. The intent of the search query is still a very strong signal, so a slow page may still rank highly if it has great, relevant content.” , Google, 2018

Google is focused on Core Web Vitals in 2021, which website page speed is a big part of:

QUOTE: “You’ll start to see positive effects once you get out of the “poor” area in core web vitals.” John Mueller, Google 2021

Largest Contentful Paint threshold recommendationsFirst Input Delay threshold recommendationsCumulative Layout Shift threshold recommendations

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Average Page Download Speeds

Speed Average Speed Index Cover 1Speed Average Speed Index GB

Historically most of us have focused on making our desktop versions of our site load as fast as possible, but with Google switching to the mobile index first, and increase in the number of users on mobile devices, we must also now focus on mobile speed, too.

Research from Doubleclick (owned by Google) published in September 2016 by Alex Shellhammer, DOUBLECLICK, 2016 suggests:

QUOTE: ‘The average load time for mobile sites is 19 seconds over 3G connections.’

and

QUOTE‘Slow loading sites frustrate users and negatively impact publishers. In our new study, “The Need for Mobile Speed”, we found that 53% of mobile site visits are abandoned if pages take longer than 3 seconds to load.’

and

QUOTE‘sites that load in 5 seconds vs 19 seconds observed: 25% higher ad viewability (and) 70% longer average sessions (and) 35% lower bounce rates’

The report concludes:

QUOTE‘While there are several factors that impact revenue, our model projects that publishers whose mobile sites load in 5 seconds earn up to 2x more mobile ad revenue than those whose sites load in 19 seconds.’

Daniel An, Google, 2018 has also produced the following infographic on page load industry benchmarks:

Mobile page speed new industry benchmarks

Case studies on website page speed performance

QUOTE: “Consider this: Mobile sites lag behind desktop sites in key engagement metrics such as average time on site, pages per visit, and bounce rate. For retailers, this can be especially costly since 30% of all online shopping purchases now happen on mobile phones. The average U.S. retail mobile site loaded in 6.9 seconds in July 2016, but, according to the most recent data, 40% of consumers will leave a page that takes longer than three seconds to load. And 79% of shoppers who are dissatisfied with site performance say they’re less likely to purchase from the same site again.” Daniel An & Pat Meenan, Google, 2016

At the start of 2018, Pingdom offered us some new insight on how load time affects bounce rate:

QUOTE: "What we found was that, unsurprisingly, a page’s load time directly impacts bounce rate."

QUOTE: “From the millions of tests performed using our website speed tests, we found that the average load time for a webpage is 3.21 seconds…[] What we found was that, unsurprisingly, a page’s load time directly impacts bounce rate….[] as soon as the page load time surpasses 3 seconds, the bounce rate soars, to 38% by the time it hits 5 seconds!” Pingdom, 2018

There are now many third-party website speed case studies available to back these findings from Google, Pingdom, and Doubleclick up:

  1. In 2021, Yelp reduced the Yelp Page Complete (75th percentile) by 25% and the First Contentful Paint (75th percentile) by 45% which resulted in their conversion rate improving by 15%.
  2. In 2021, Yahoo! Japan News reduced their CLS by .2 which decreased the number of poor performance URLS in search consoles by 98%. This saw an increase in page views per session of 15.1%, session durations lasted 13.3% longer, and a decrease in bounce rate of 1.72 percentage points.
  3. In 2021, Vodafone improved its LCP by 30%. This saw an increase in their lead to visit rate of 15%, their cart to visit rate increasing by 11%, and an overall 8% increase in sales.
  4. In 2021, Tokopedia improved their LCP by 55% which resulted in the average session duration increasing by 23%.
  5. In 2021, iCook improved their CLY by 15% which resulted in ad revenue increasing by 10%.
  6. In 2021, Swappie was able to reduce their load time by 23%, the LCP by 55%, CLS by 91%, and FID by 90%. These improvements saw an increase in mobile revenue of 42% and a 10 percent increase in relative conversion rate.
  7. In 2020, Aldo discovered that with their single-page app, mobile users with fast rendering times brought 75% more revenue than average and compared to slow rendering times this increased to 327%. With the desktop platform, it was 212% more revenue compared to average and 572% more than slow.
  8. In 2020, Google completed a study looking at millions of page impressions. They discovered that when a site meets the recommended thresholds for the Core Web Vitals metrics, it resulted in users being at least 24% less likely to leave a page before it loads.
  9. In 2020, Rossignol.com increased its load time by 1.9 seconds while also cutting its Speed Index by a factor of 10. Compared to the previous year this contributed to a 94% improvement in conversion rate.
  10. In 2020, SnipesUSA.com was able to reduce their page load speed by 30% which saw their average conversion rate double from 1% to 2%.
  11. In 2020, SportShoes.com found that mobile visits that were faster-than-average were 41% more likely to convert compared to slower-than-average visits.
  12. In 2020, Agrofy implemented improvements to a number of performance metrics including LCP, CLS, and Long Task Time. This resulted in a reduction in their abandonment rate of 76% alongside a significant boost in engagement.
  13. In 2020, Revelry, the Bridesmaid dress retailer relaunched their site ensuring that it was on the updated version of their eCommerce platform and optimised with smaller images. This has resulted in the site loading 43% faster, conversion rates up 30%, and an 8% decrease in bounce rates.
  14. In 2020, NDTV who are one of India’s top websites and news stations saw improvements of 55% with LCP and a reduction in bounce rate of 50%.
  15. In 2019, Google Search decided to include speed as a ranking signal although a very small element. Following this, they have seen an improvement of 15%-20% in user-centric perf metrics of pages loaded from search results alongside a reduction in the abandonment of 20%.
  16. In 2018, Missguided decided that for Android visitors they would remove BazaarVoice.  This meant an improvement of 4s for the median page load time and resulted in an increase of 26% in revenue.
  17. In 2018, Tokopedia delivered a render time decreased from 14s to 2s for 3G connections.  Delivering this reduction resulted in an impressive 19% increase in visitors; new users increasing by 7%; total sessions improving by 35%; active users improving by 17% and sessions per user went up 16%.
  18. In 2018, Zalando completed work that reduced their load time by 100ms and this resulted in a revenue increase of 0.7%.
  19. In 2018, Web Studio Sparkbox deployed performance updates and AMP Pages to their site that resulted in them improving their Driver Solution conversion within Organic traffic.  This rate increased to 5.57%, which was more than double the initial rate of 2.69%.
  20. In 2018, Carousell implemented changes that reduced their page load time by 65%. This reduction resulted in a 63% increase in organic traffic; saw a three-fold increase in advertising click-through rate and first-time chatters increased by 46%.
  21. In 2017, BBC declared they lose an additional 10% of users for every additional second it takes for their site to load
  22. In 2017, Pinterest performance optimisation resulted in a 40% decrease in wait time, a 15% increase in organic traffic, and a 15% increase in signups conversion rate.
  23. In 2017, COOK increased the conversion rate by 7% after reducing the average page load time by 0.85 seconds. The bounce rate also fell by 7%.
  24. In 2017, Zitmaxx Wonen reduced load time to 3 seconds and conversions jumped 50.2%. Revenue from mobile increased by 98.7%.
  25. In 2016, FT declared tests of the new, faster FT.com resulted in users were up to 30% more engaged with the site.
  26. In 2016, Instagram increased impressions and user profile scroll interactions by simply speeding up their site.
  27. In 2016, The Trainline reduced latency by 0.3s across their funnel, and revenue increased by an extra £8 million a year.
  28. In 2016, Artificial latency added to the Telegraph resulted in page views dropping by 11% for a 4s delay and 44% for a 20s delay.
  29. In 2016, A presentation by AliExpress claimed they reduced load time for their pages by 36% and recorded a 10.5% increase in orders and a 27% increase in conversion rates for new customers.
  30. In 2016 Ancestory.com recorded a 7% positive rise in conversions after improving the render time of web pages by 68%, reducing page bloat by 46% and reducing load time by 64%.
  31. In 2006, Akamai claimed 75% of the 1,058 people asked would not return to websites that took longer than *four* seconds to load.

Very interestingly:

QUOTE: ‘For every 100ms decrease in homepage load speed, Mobify’s customer base saw a 1.11% lift in session based conversion, amounting to an average annual revenue increase of $376,789. Similarly, for every 100ms decrease in checkout page load speed, Mobify’s customers saw a 1.55% lift* in session based conversion, amounting to an average annual revenue increase of $526,147′  (from wpostats, 2016)

chart-1-1024x584

Another very interesting recent speed experiments ran at Forbes, 2016 have also concluded:

QUOTE: “over the testing period users read fewer articles each day whilst experiencing delays loading each web page.”

Page load time 7 days impact 28 days
1 second slower -4.9% -4.6%
2 second slower -5.0%
3 second slower -7.2% -7.9%

QUOTE: “It’s clear from our test that the speed of our website affects both of these revenue streams, over the short term, to the tune of hundreds of thousands of pounds, and in the long-term millions. The speed of the site negatively impacts a user’s session depth, no matter how small the delay. Slow sites also have a detrimental effect on the number of articles people read. Largely, the slower the site, the greater the effect. The data suggests, both in terms of user experience and financial impact, that there are clear and highly valued benefits in making the site even faster. From this research we’ve chosen to invest even more time in making every aspect of the new FT.com website even faster over the coming months.” FORBES, 2016

Other research is hard to find but would indicate as fast as possible.

Research (way back in 2013) would suggest that slow load times are having an increased impact on e-commerce websites:

QUOTE: “a 2-second delay in load time during a transaction resulted in abandonment rates of up to 87%. This is significantly higher than the baseline abandonment rate of 67%.” Tammy Everts, Radware, 2013

abandonment rate due to site speed

In a 2012 study, it was found that:

QUOTE: “two thirds of UK consumers (67%) cite slow loading times as the main reason they would abandon an online purchase.” David Moth, Econsultancy.com, 2012

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Maile Ohye, from Google, in 2010, claimed:

QUOTE: “2 seconds is the threshold for ecommerce website acceptability. At Google, we aim for under a half second.

That claim was based on independent research commissioned by a company called Akamai back in 2009:

QUOTE: “Based on the feedback of 1,048 online shoppers that were surveyed, Forrester Consulting concluded the following key findings:

  • 47 percent of consumers expect a web page to load in two seconds or less
  • 40 percent of consumers will wait no more than three seconds for a web page to render before abandoning the site.
  • 52 percent of online shoppers stated that quick page loading is important to their site loyalty.
  • Shoppers often become distracted when made to wait for a page to load. 14 percent will begin shopping at another site, and 23 percent will stop shopping or walk away from their computer.
  • Retail and travel sites that underperform lead to lost sales. 79 percent of online shoppers who experience a dissatisfying visit are less likely to buy from that site again. 64 percent would simply purchase from another online store.

Additional findings indicate that quick page loading is a key factor in a consumer’s loyalty to an eCommerce site, especially for high spenders. 79 percent of online shoppers who experience a dissatisfying visit are less likely to buy from the same site again while 27 percent are less likely to buy from the same site’s physical store, suggesting that the impact of a bad online experience will reach beyond the web and can result in lost store sales.” Akamai 2009

A decade ago, research commissioned by the same organisation claimed that web shoppers were more likely to abandon a website if it took longer than four seconds to load.

The research by Akamai in 2006 revealed users’ dwindling patience with websites that take time to show up.

The time it took a site to appear on screen came second to high prices and shipping costs in the list of shoppers’ pet hates, the research revealed. Akamai consulted a group who shopped regularly online to find out what they like and dislike about e-tailing sites.

About half of mature net-shoppers – who have been buying online for more than two years or who spend more than $1,500 (£788) a year online – ranked page-loading time as a priority.

Akamai claims that one-third of those questioned abandon sites that take time to load is hard to navigate or take too long to handle the checkout process.

The four-second threshold is half the time previous research, conducted during the early days of the web-shopping boom, suggested that shoppers would wait for a site to finish loading. To make matters worse, the research found that the experience shoppers have on a retail site colours their entire view of the company behind it.

About 30% of those responding said they formed a “negative perception” of a company with a badly put-together site or would tell their family and friends about their experiences. Further research by Akamai found that almost half of the online stores in the list of the top 500 US shopping sites take longer than the four-second threshold to finish loading.

The survey questioned 1,058 net shoppers during the first six months of 2006. Consultants Jupiter Research did the survey for Akamai.

Whether this research is 100% valid is explored by your own experience. For instance, if you KNOW that the information you need is probably on a specific web page, you’ll probably wait a lot longer than ten seconds to see the info. But if you do not…

Undeniably, though, it’s been a long-held belief in good practice website design that your website needs to load fast if you want to keep visitors happy. This research only backed this up.

And that was many years ago.

Today, Site speed is a critical area of website development and profitable e-commerce.

Desktop users expect a site to load within a second or two. Mobile users are a little more patient, for now.

See below how slow load times impact your business:

How Loading Time Affects Your Bottom Line

Download speeds

Google provides a lot of help for webmasters to help make a website faster. The following research is also provided by Google:

Optimize Average Request Count Cover 1

Optimize Average Request Count GB

Weight Average Page Weight Bytes Cover 1

Weight Average Page Weight Bytes GB

Speed Average Time to First Byte Cover 1 Speed Average Time to First Byte GB

Bandwidth or the capacity to send and receive data is an important consideration when designing an electronic document for distribution over the Internet.

It is important that the link to the Internet (from the computer serving the pages to customers) has sufficient capacity to be able to handle the expected load.

Otherwise, the response to users will be unsatisfactorily slow.

Some people today STILL connect to the Internet over a phone line, using a modem with a speed of 28.8 to 56 kilobits per second (kbit/s).

This “narrowband” communication requires user to wait while a dial-up connection is made before they can access the Internet, and means that Internet use, when connected, is slow.

Broadband services offer significantly faster data rates, enabling the delivery of services, such as high-speed Internet access. These may also be “always on” connections to the Internet.

However, what looks great and downloads quickly within the confines of the Web manager’s high-speed network connection does not necessarily work as well for the average user of the Internet.

It is probably best to presume that your user has a SLOW connection capability – and aim to deliver for them a satisfying user experience as possible.

Then – everybody wins.

What happens to your Google rankings when you improve page speed scores?

Improving your page speed scores in isolation of developing a compelling user experience, will not magically lead to BETTER rankings in Google in the short term.

As many SEO said back in the day, and Maile Ohye confirmed in the video from 2010:

QUOTE: “Rankings is a nuanced process and there is over 200 signals, but now speed is one of them. Know that ‘content’ and relevance’ are still primary.” Maile Ohye, Google, 2010

A technical approach to improving user experience begins with improving site speed.

A faster site should improve visitor satisfaction levels and the number of conversions, for instance. This very well might have a second-order effect on your rankings over time – as many SEO think that QUERY COMPLETION & SATISFACTION SIGNALS are significant measurements in how Google orders search engine results pages.

I never expected faster website load times to directly improve the rankings of my website in the short term.

I did want a faster site, though – for all the benefits I list at the beginning of this article.

I still use Google Search Console (AKA Google Webmaster Tools) and the other tools mentioned to keep an eye on website download speeds and accessibility.

Join our Free SEO training course to find out more.

Website & page load speed is a Google ranking factor, but….

QUOTE: ‘content’ and relevance’ are still primary’ Maile Ohye, Google, 2010

Website and page load speed may affect Google rankings, just not as much as links, good titles & content that satisfies a search engine visitors’ intent. My test above confirmed what I already thought.

A fast host could be argued to be a prerequisite, and a fast site too if your web designer has any clue.

I’m asked quite a lot these days about server speed and Google rankings. It could be part of the algorithm on some VERY minute level (why not?), but small differentials in page speed load will never be as important than the actual utility or relevance of the page you want to rank.

You can’t put lipstick on a pig, and it’s risky, long-term, to try to.

If your server is dog*&^% and your website takes minutes to load it’s a bad user experience and your site probably will not be doing your online business any good, anytime soon. And if that is the case, then site-speed will be a negative ranking for your site.

Join our Free SEO training course to find out more.

Free Website & Page Load Speed Tests & Tools

There are a few excellent page speed tools you can run free reports with to help you create a fast-loading website:

  1. https://developers.google.com/speed/pagespeed/insights/
  2. https://www.webpagetest.org/
  3. https://gtmetrix.com/
  4. https://tools.pingdom.com/
  5. https://www.uptrends.com/tools/website-speed-test

NitroPack - Improve your Google PageSpeed score

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