Trigger Pressure Test
Test trigger sensitivity and measure analog pressure levels
How to use the trigger pressure tester
The trigger pressure tester reads the raw analog values your L2 and R2 triggers send across their full range — from fully released at 0% to fully pressed at 100%. A healthy trigger moves smoothly through every value in between. A faulty one will skip, stick, plateau early or never quite reach the extremes. Here is how to run the test.
USB or Bluetooth — USB gives a smoother, more precise reading with less signal noise
Activates the browser's controller detection — required before any input registers
Push L2 and R2 from fully released to fully pressed — go slowly and watch the bar fill
Confirm the value reaches 0% at rest and 100% when fully pressed — anything else is a problem
Test the full range, not just the press. Slowly drag the trigger from fully released to fully pressed and back again, watching whether the bar moves smoothly and continuously. A healthy trigger shows a clean, uninterrupted sweep. Any jump, pause or plateau in the bar movement means the analog sensor is not reading the position correctly across that part of the range.
What your trigger results actually mean
The tester shows you a live percentage value and a fill bar for each trigger. Here is how to read what you are seeing and what each result tells you about the condition of your trigger.
Your trigger is healthy. It releases fully at rest and reaches maximum pressure when fully pressed. The bar sweeps smoothly between both extremes. No action needed.
The trigger is not reaching its full mechanical range. It might plateau at 92% or never fully return to 0% at rest. Often caused by spring wear or sensor drift — functional but not performing at full capacity.
The bar does not move smoothly — it jumps between values or drops out entirely in parts of the range. This means the analog sensor inside the trigger mechanism is failing and needs replacing.
A trigger that stops at 98% is usually normal. Due to mechanical tolerances and slight variations between controllers, it is common for triggers to plateau at 97–99% rather than exactly 100%. This has no real-world impact on gameplay. A trigger that stops at 85% or lower is a genuine problem worth investigating.
Why analog triggers matter for gaming
Analog triggers are one of the most underappreciated parts of a controller. Unlike face buttons which are simply on or off, triggers measure how hard you are pressing — every value from 0% to 100% means something different in the game. A trigger that cannot reach its full range is actively limiting your performance in ways most players never think to test.
Throttle and braking are mapped directly to trigger pressure. A trigger that only reaches 85% means you can never apply full throttle — you are always slower out of corners than your controller should allow. Partial braking affects stopping distance and turn-in precision.
Many shooters use the trigger's midpoint to activate aim-down-sights and the full press to fire. If the trigger does not reach full range, the firing input may feel heavier or less responsive. Some games also use trigger pressure for fire rate — harder press means faster shooting.
In football games like FIFA or EA FC, trigger pressure controls shot power and pass weight. A trigger stuck below 100% means you can never hit a full-power shot. In basketball games, the trigger affects dribbling strength and post moves.
Common trigger problems and what causes them
Most trigger problems fall into one of four categories. Here is what each looks like in the tester and what is actually happening inside the controller.
Check that nothing is physically blocking the trigger travel. If the trigger feels like it is hitting a hard stop before full press, the internal spring or plastic stop tab may be worn or broken. Replacement trigger mechanisms are available for all major controller models.
If the trigger sits at 3–8% at rest, it is not fully releasing. This can cause ghost inputs in games — small actions registering without you pressing anything. Try compressed air around the trigger base. If it persists, the return spring needs replacing.
The trigger uses a small analog sensor similar to the one in your analog sticks. When it gets dirty or wears out, it reads positions incorrectly. Isopropyl alcohol cleaning around the trigger mechanism sometimes helps — if not, the sensor itself needs replacing.
A physically stiff trigger that reads correctly in the test is usually a mechanical issue rather than an electrical one. Compressed air around the edges of the trigger often frees up debris. A trigger that feels mushy but reads fine may just need the spring replaced for a firmer feel.
How triggers differ between controller brands
Not all analog triggers are built the same way. The mechanism, travel distance and sensor type vary significantly between brands — which affects both how they feel and how they perform in this test.
| Controller | Trigger Type | Travel Distance | Notable Feature |
|---|---|---|---|
| PS5 DualSense | Adaptive (variable resistance) | Long travel | Resistance changes mid-press — this test reads the base analog value underneath the haptic layer |
| PS4 DualShock 4 | Standard analog | Medium travel | Simple and reliable — one of the most consistent trigger mechanisms across the PlayStation lineup |
| Xbox Series X/S | Standard analog | Long travel | Textured trigger surface — widely regarded as one of the best-feeling standard triggers in the industry |
| Xbox Elite Series 2 | Hair trigger mode + standard | Adjustable | Physical locks shorten the travel — test both positions if you use hair trigger mode |
| Nintendo Switch Pro | Standard analog | Short travel | Shorter travel than PlayStation or Xbox — maximum pressure reached more quickly |
| 8BitDo Pro 2 | Standard analog | Medium travel | Adjustable trigger sensitivity via rear paddles — good option for users needing a customisable trigger feel |
Why testing your triggers is worth doing
Trigger problems are easy to overlook because they rarely cause the controller to stop working altogether. A trigger stuck at 88% still fires. It still brakes. It still works — just not fully. The degradation is gradual enough that most players adapt without noticing. They press a little harder than they used to. They wonder why races feel slightly slower. They assume they are off their game.
Testing your triggers before buying a used controller is especially valuable. Trigger wear is almost impossible to detect by eye or by feel alone — a worn trigger often feels completely normal until you see the numbers. A trigger that stops at 82% in this test is a red flag that the internal mechanism is significantly worn and will likely need replacing within months of regular use.
For competitive players — particularly in racing, sports and shooter games where trigger pressure translates directly into in-game actions — knowing your triggers are reaching full range means you are not artificially limiting your maximum performance. A 15-minute trigger test is a small investment for that certainty.