Your screen’s PPI determines how sharp text and graphics appear. Use our calculator to find your exact PPI.
Screen PPI Checker
Enter your screen's resolution and diagonal size to find your true pixels per inch.
Common screen sizes: 15.6" laptop, 24" monitor, 27" monitor, 6.1" phone
No installs, no registration, just open the mouse DPI tester and get accurate results in seconds.
Most users never actually know their monitor’s true pixel density, and that gap often shows up as blurry text, uneven scaling, and display settings that never feel fully correct. DPI Analyzer removes that guesswork by giving you an instant view of your screen’s pixel density the moment the page loads, without downloads, sign-ups, or manual calculations.
Just open the tool and see exactly how sharp your display really is and what your system is working with.
Screen DPI, more accurately known as PPI (pixels per inch), measures how many pixels are packed into each inch of your display. It is calculated using your screen resolution and physical size, meaning the same resolution can look very different on different screen sizes.
For example, a 27-inch 1440p monitor and a 24-inch 1440p monitor have the same resolution but completely different sharpness levels because their pixel density is not the same.
In practical terms, screen DPI determines whether text looks crisp or slightly soft, whether images retain fine detail, and whether scaling in Windows feels natural or slightly off. Knowing your exact pixel density helps you make better decisions for display settings, calibration, and even gaming configuration.
Most tools require manual input and extra steps. DPI Analyzer is designed to remove friction and deliver instant, accurate results directly in your browser.
The process takes only a few seconds and works automatically:
DPI and PPI are often confused, but they describe different things.
Operating systems often label display scaling as “DPI,” even though it actually relates to pixel density (PPI). This tool calculates true PPI based on your screen size and resolution.
Apple’s Retina standard is typically around 220 PPI, where individual pixels become difficult to distinguish at normal viewing distance.
Pixel density directly affects how everything appears on your display:
Yes, completely. There are no sign-ups, paywalls, or usage limits. Open the page, and your result appears automatically, without any cost or account required.
DPI measures ink dots per inch in print. PPI measures pixels per inch on a display. Windows uses "DPI" for scaling settings, but when you check screen DPI, you're measuring PPI.
Open the DPI Analyzer's screen DPI calculator, enter your monitor's diagonal size if prompted, and your exact pixel density result appears instantly alongside your resolution and aspect ratio.
For most users, 100–120 PPI is the practical minimum for comfortable daily use. Designers and professionals typically prefer 140 PPI or above for sharper, more accurate output.
Your screen resolution DPI affects text sharpness, image clarity, Windows scaling accuracy, and design output. Wrong DPI settings can cause blurry text, oversized icons, or off-looking scaling across applications.
Yes. DPI Analyzer works on any browser-based device. Your phone or tablet's pixel density result appears the same way it does on a desktop or laptop.
Results depend on the screen size you provide. If you enter the correct diagonal measurement, the calculation is accurate; it reads your native resolution and computes PPI from your exact display dimensions.