Is Your 144Hz Monitor Actually Running at 60Hz? How to Check Now
Published on KeyMouseHub
You spent hundreds of dollars on a high-refresh-rate gaming monitor. You unboxed it, plugged it in, and jumped straight into Valorant or Call of Duty expecting to become an esports god.
But here is the uncomfortable truth: Most gamers are still playing at 60Hz without knowing it.
Just buying the monitor doesn’t make it fast. Windows defaults almost every display to 60Hz for compatibility reasons. If you didn’t manually change this setting, you are essentially driving a Ferrari in first gear.
🛑 STOP GUESSING. TEST IT NOW.
Don’t trust the settings menu. Browsers and cables can limit your frames. Use our real-time tool to see exactly what your eyes are getting.
Launch Refresh Rate CheckerContents
The “Placebo Effect” in Gaming
Why do so many people make this mistake? Because of the placebo effect. You expect the game to feel smoother because you bought a new screen, so your brain convinces you it is smoother.
However, once you actually experience true 144Hz or 240Hz, going back to 60Hz feels like a slideshow. The difference is mathematical:
- 60Hz: Updates every 16.6 milliseconds.
- 144Hz: Updates every 6.9 milliseconds.
- 240Hz: Updates every 4.1 milliseconds.
If our Refresh Rate Tool showed you a number lower than what you paid for, follow the fixes below immediately.
Fix #1: The Windows Display Settings
This is the most common culprit. Windows does not automatically detect your “Gaming Intent.”
- Right-click anywhere on your Desktop and select Display Settings.
- Scroll down and click on Advanced Display.
- Look for “Choose a refresh rate”.
- Click the dropdown menu. If it says “60.000 Hz”, change it to the highest number available (144Hz, 165Hz, etc).
Your screen will go black for a second. When it comes back, you should notice instantly that even moving the mouse cursor feels smoother.
Fix #2: You Are Using the Wrong Cable
If you went to the settings above but the option for 144Hz wasn’t there, the problem is likely your physical connection.
To unlock the full potential of a gaming monitor, you should almost always use a **DisplayPort (DP) cable**. It creates a direct, high-bandwidth connection to your GPU (NVIDIA or AMD) and supports G-Sync/FreeSync properly.
Fix #3: Browser & Power Limits
Sometimes, your game runs at 144Hz, but your browser (Chrome/Edge) feels laggy. This happens because browsers often limit FPS to save energy, especially on laptops.
- Laptop Gamers: Ensure your laptop is plugged into the wall. Running on battery often locks the screen to 60Hz or 30Hz automatically.
- Hardware Acceleration: Make sure “Hardware Acceleration” is enabled in your browser settings so it can access your GPU for rendering.
Pro Tip: Balance Your Setup
Unlocking 144Hz is just step one. A fast monitor is useless if your other peripherals are slow. It creates a bottleneck called “Input Lag.”
After fixing your monitor, run these two quick checks to ensure your setup is fully optimized:
- Check your Mouse: Does your mouse sensor stutter? A 144Hz monitor reveals mouse flaws easily. Test your Mouse Polling Rate here.
- Check your Resolution: Running a 4K resolution on a mid-tier card will kill your FPS, rendering the 144Hz monitor useless. Check your Screen Resolution here.
Conclusion
Don’t be the gamer who plays for years on 60Hz without knowing. It takes 30 seconds to verify. Scroll up, run our Hz Checker, and make sure you are getting every frame you paid for.
