Your analog stick reports its position on every frame. At rest, a healthy stick reads 0.0000 on both axes. If it reads anything else - it is drift. This tool measures your exact X and Y axis offset. Through the Gamepad API, it scores your circularity, and tells you if you need cleaning, recalibration, or a hardware fix.
Open this site in Google Chrome or Microsoft Edge for the most accurate Gamepad API readings. Connect via USB for clean results; Bluetooth jitter can skew idle readings by 0.01-0.03.
Let go. Do not touch either stick. Watch the X and Y axis values settle. Whatever you see after 3 seconds is your true idle offset. That is your hardware drift.
Match your reading with the drift tolerance table below. The number tells you what action to take: monitor, recalibrate, clean, or replace.
Slowly push your stick in a full circle at maximum deflection. A healthy stick draws a near-perfect circle. Flat edges indicate mechanical wear.
Stick drift happens when your analog stick reports movement you did not input. The Gamepad API reads axis values from -1.0 to +1.0. A drifting stick reports a non zero value at rest.
Your character moves, your camera slides, and your crosshair pulls in one direction without you touching anything. Minor drift below ±0.05 often gets masked by in game dead zone settings. That is why you need raw axis data not just a feeling.
Most controllers use contact based potentiometers inside the analog stick module. A wiper physically touches a resistive track. Over time typically 400 600 hours of use that contact point wears out and starts reporting incorrect positions. PS4 DualShock 4 and Xbox Series controllers rely on this tech.
Debris under the stick cap pushes the potentiometer away from its neutral position. This causes consistent drift in one direction with the same value every time rather than random jitter. Cleaning with Isopropyl Alcohol (90%+) often fixes it without full disassembly.
The PS5 DualSense has a specific hardware issue competitors do not mention. The flex cable connecting the stick module to the mainboard fatigues over time. This causes drift that cleaning will not fix because the fault is in the cable not the module.
Sometimes the stick simply loses its calibrated neutral point. The axis reads a constant 0.03 0.08 in one direction but jitter is minimal. This is Calibration Drift a software fix that does not require hardware replacement.
Before spending money, check if you are eligible for a Free Repair. Most official controllers come with a 1-year warranty. Nintendo also offers free Joy-Con drift repairs in many regions even out of warranty.
| Controller | Repair Cost (Pro) | New Price | Decision |
|---|---|---|---|
| PS5 DualSense | $40 - $60 | $75 | Repair if under $50 |
| Xbox Series X/S | $35 - $55 | $60 | Repair if under warranty |
| Joy-Con (Pair) | $25 - $40 | $80 | DIY for $10 |
| Nintendo Switch Pro | $30 - $45 | $70 | Repair |
| Xbox Elite Series 2 | $60 - $90 | $180 | Always Repair |
For detailed teardowns and step-by-step part replacement instructions, we recommend iFixit's expert database.
VIEW IFIXIT REPAIR MANUALS →| Drift Situation | Use Calibration | Use Dead Zone |
|---|---|---|
| Stick sits off-center at rest (Constant) | ✅ Recommended | ❌ Inefficient |
| Values jitter randomly but return to 0 | ❌ Won't Fix | ✅ Recommended |
| Drift occurs in only one specific direction | ✅ Recommended | Partial |
| Drift intensity is above ±0.20 offset | ⚠️ Hardware Fix Required | |
| Fine-tuning aim precision & response | ❌ Not for this | ✅ Recommended |
Calibration resets your stick’s neutral baseline. Think of it as a "Tare" button on a scale. It subtracts the idle offset from the raw signal. Best used when your stick has a consistent "lean" in one direction.
Dead zone expands the input threshold. It creates a "safety circle" that ignores all jittery values below a set floor. Use it to eliminate random noise or shaky aim caused by loose springs.
INSIGHT: Traditional sticks rely on carbon tracks that wear down over time. Hall Effect sensors use Magnetic Fields to detect movement without physical contact, virtually eliminating stick drift for 2026 and beyond.
| Type | Mechanism | Drift Risk | Best 2026 Models |
|---|---|---|---|
| Potentiometer | Physical wiper on Carbon Tracks | High (Mechanical Wear) | DualSense Edge, Xbox Series Core |
| Hall Effect / TMR | Contactless Magnetic Induction | Near Zero (Magnetic) | Flydigi Vader 4 Pro, GuliKit KK3 Max |
INSIGHT: It's not just about "staying centered." Circularity measures Diagonal Accuracy. Low scores indicate axis wear that causes inconsistent movement in high-stakes competitive gaming.
A perfect stick draws a smooth circle reaching 1.0000 on every axis. High circularity ensures your diagonal inputs register accurately in competitive titles.
Worn sticks show flat edges or irregular corners. Below 70 indicates Mechanical Gate Wear or potentiometer damage on specific axes that causes missed diagonal shots.
| 0.00 - 0.05 | Healthy / Perfect |
| 0.05 - 0.15 | Normal Wear (Deadzone Needed) |
| 0.15 - 0.25 | Moderate Drift (Clean It) |
| 0.25+ | Critical (Replace Sensor) |
Our tool reads raw 16-bit analog data via the browser's Gamepad API. Our algorithm measures the vector magnitude of your X/Y offset to pinpoint even the smallest ghost movements that in-game tests might miss.
Check circularity and snapping precision.
Test SticksVerify every D-pad and action button.
Test ButtonsFind your hardware's exact noise floor.
CalculateMeasure 0-255 pressure sensitivity.
Test TriggersTest haptic feedback health.
Test RumbleMeasure input lag and Hertz.
Test LatencyPro Diagnosis Complete?
Match your data with the tolerance table above. If drift is over ±0.15, consider a repair or a Hall Effect upgrade.