Time to Interactive (TTI) is a lab metric for measuring load responsiveness. It helps identify cases where a page looks interactive but actually isn't. A fast TTI helps ensure that the page is usable.
What is TTI?
The TTI metric measures the time from when the page starts loading to when its main sub-resources have loaded and it is capable of reliably responding to user input quickly.
To calculate TTI based on a performance trace of a web page, follow these steps:
- Start at First Contentful Paint (FCP).
- Search forward in time for a quiet window of at least five seconds, where quiet window is defined as: no long tasks and no more than two in-flight network GET requests.
- Search backwards for the last long task before the quiet window, stopping at FCP if no long tasks are found.
- TTI is the end time of the last long task before the quiet window (or the same value as FCP if no long tasks are found).
The following diagram should help visualize the steps above:
Historically, developers have optimized pages for fast render times, sometimes at the expense of TTI.
Techniques like server-side rendering (SSR) can lead to scenarios where a page looks interactive (that is, links and buttons are visible on the screen), but it's not actually interactive because the main thread is blocked or because the JavaScript code controlling those elements hasn't loaded.
When users try to interact with a page that looks interactive but actually isn't, they'll likely respond in one of two ways:
- In the best-case scenario, they'll be annoyed that the page is slow to respond.
- In the worst-case scenario, they'll assume the page is broken and likely leave. They may even lose confidence or trust in the value of your brand.
To avoid this problem, make every effort to minimize the difference between FCP and TTI. And in cases where a noticeable difference does exist, make it clear through visual indicators that the components on your page are not yet interactive.
How to measure TTI
TTI is a metric that's best measured in the lab. The best way to measure TTI is to run a Lighthouse performance audit on your site. See the Lighthouse documentation on TTI for usage details.
Lab tools
What is a good TTI score?
To provide a good user experience, sites should strive to have a Time to Interactive of less than 5 seconds when tested on average mobile hardware.
For details on how your page's TTI affects your Lighthouse performance score, see How Lighthouse determines your TTI score.
How to improve TTI
To learn how to improve TTI for a specific site, you can run a Lighthouse performance audit and pay attention to any specific opportunities the audit suggests.
To learn how to improve TTI in general (for any site), refer to the following performance guides: