Schulte Table · 1–25 Speed Grid
A 5×5 grid holds the numbers 1 to 25 in random order. Tap them in order starting at 1. The clock starts on your first tap and stops when you reach 25. Wrong taps flash but don't end the run — they just cost you time.
How to play Schulte Table
A 5×5 grid holds the numbers 1 to 25 in random order. Tap them in order starting at 1. The clock starts on your first tap and stops when you reach 25. Wrong taps flash but don't end the run — they just cost you time.
What it measures
The Schulte table is a classic test of attention span, visual search and peripheral vision. Fixing your gaze on the centre and finding numbers in your periphery is the technique speed-readers train.
Honest note: A timed attention drill with a long history in psychology and speed-reading. Fun to beat your own time; no claims beyond that.
What's a good score?
Beginners take 40–60 seconds; under 30 is good and under 20 is excellent. The percentile we show is an estimate based on typical distributions, not a clinical norm.
FAQ
Any technique?
Try to keep your eyes near the centre and spot numbers with your peripheral vision rather than darting around.
Do wrong taps end it?
No — they just flash and cost you time, so precision helps your clock.