This is a collection of interesting website speed-related statistics. It includes stats about visitor expectations, business impact, user experience, market trends, etc., regarding speed.
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Website Speed Statistics: Top Picks
- 47% of people expect an average site to load in under 2 seconds.
- 53% of people leave a page if it takes longer than three seconds to load on their mobile devices.
- For B2B websites, a site that loads in 1 second has a conversion rate 3x higher than a site that loads in 5 seconds and 5x higher than a site that loads in 10 seconds.
- A one-second delay in mobile load times can impact conversion rates by up to 20%.
- 79% of shoppers who are dissatisfied with site performance say they’re less likely to purchase from the same site again.
- Every 1-second delay reduces user satisfaction by 16%.
- 43% of site owners plan to invest in improvements to better website speed and performance.
- As the page load time increases from 1 to 10 seconds, the probability of bounce rate increases up to 123%.
- On average, 53% of the websites on the internet have a good CWV score for desktop sites, and 41% have a good CWV score on mobile.
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Consumer Expectations Of Website Speed
- 47% of people expect an average site to load in under 2 seconds. [Source]
- 53% of people leave a page if it takes longer than three seconds to load on their mobile devices. [Source]
- Nearly 70% of consumers say page speed impacts their willingness to buy from an online retailer. [Source]
- 54% of people say that as the load time for a brand’s mobile site increases, so does their frustration. [Source]
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How Website Speed Affects The Business Bottom Line
- A one-second site loading speed delay might decrease conversions by 7%. [Source]
- Online businesses lost nearly $2.6 billion in revenue because of slow loading speed. [Source]
- A one-second delay in mobile load times can impact conversion rates by up to 20%. [Source]
- One study found that a two-second delay in load times increases the shopping cart abandonment rate to 87%. [Source]
- When pages load in 1 second, the average conversion rate is almost 40%. At a 2-second load time, the conversion rate already drops to 34%. At 3 seconds, the conversion rate begins to level off at 29% and reaches its lowest at a 6-second load time. [Source]
- For B2B websites, a site that loads in 1 second has a conversion rate 3x higher than a site that loads in 5 seconds and 5x higher than a site that loads in 10 seconds. [Source]
- Akamai analyzed global mobile session traffic and calculated the peak conversion rate of 4.75% was reached when the page load time was 3.3 seconds. A one-second increase brought the conversion rate down to 3.52%, a 26% drop. Clearly, a slower page load time has a negative effect on users and their propensity to purchase. [Source]
- 79% of shoppers who are dissatisfied with site performance say they’re less likely to purchase from the same site again. [Source]
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Website Speed Statistics: Market Trends
- 43% of site owners plan to invest in improvements to better website speed and performance. [Source]
- Since 2019, the improvement in B2B website page load time has been flat, with 82% of the websites loading in 5 seconds or less. [Source]
- For B2C websites, there is a slight improvement in site speed compared to pre-pandemic levels, with more websites loading in under 5 seconds. [Source]
- The average Core Web Vitals score among top website builders is consistently improving. [Source]
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Website Speed & Its Effects On Bounce Rate
- A two-second web page load time delay increases bounce rates by 103 percent. [Source]
- The probability of bounce increases 32% as page load time goes from 1 second to 3 seconds. [Source]
- As the page load time increases from 1 to 10 seconds, the bounce rate increases up to 123%. [Source]
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Website Builder Speed
Core Web Vitals (CWV) is a set of metrics that measure real-world user experience for loading performance, interactivity, and visual stability of the page.
In essence, a good CWV score means good user experience. On average, 53% of the websites on the internet have a good CWV score for desktop sites, and 41% have a good CWV score on mobile.
I analyzed this ongoing CWV technology report that tracks CWV of millions of website builder-made websites to see how they fare to the global average. I have marked above-average scores green and below-average red.
Platform |
Desktop (%) |
Mobile (%) |
All (Average) |
53 |
41 |
Squarespace |
63 |
53 |
Shopify |
68 |
62 |
Wix |
58 |
52 |
Webflow |
71 |
53 |
Hostinger |
82 |
47 |
Square Online |
0 |
0 |
WordPress.com |
66 |
53 |
WordPress.org |
43 |
35 |
Duda |
81 |
68 |
BigCommerce |
50 |
47 |
GoDaddy |
75 |
76 |
Jimdo |
75 |
74 |
Yola |
62 |
52 |
Hubspot CMS |
66 |
44 |
Strikingly |
41 |
8 |
Weebly |
50 |
43 |