Average reaction time at age 61
A typical untrained 61-year-old averages about 334 ms on a simple visual reaction test — 84 ms off the lifetime peak reached around age 24.
Reaction time follows a U-shaped curve across life: children start slow, speed peaks in the mid-20s at about 250 ms, and the average drifts gently upward afterwards. Here's exactly where age 61 sits on that curve — and why the number is less fixed than it looks.
Age 61 on the curve
| Age | Expected average |
|---|---|
| 51 years old | 305 ms |
| 56 years old | 319 ms |
| 61 years old | 334 ms |
| 66 years old | 349 ms |
| 71 years old | 366 ms |
Placed on the overall adult distribution (mean 273 ms), an average 61-year-old's 334 ms is faster than about 15.5% of all adults. The comparison is a little unfair — that pool includes every twenty-something — which is exactly why comparing against your own age group matters more.
What's happening at this age
The slope steepens slightly here but stays gradual: at 61, an average untrained adult tests around 334 ms. The bigger change is variance — day-to-day swings get wider, so single readings mean less than ever.
Research on older adults consistently shows reaction training still works at this age; trained 60-year-olds regularly out-click untrained 30-year-olds.
How to beat the curve at 61
- Use a ten-round average, always — a single slow round says nothing at this age.
- Regular light practice (a few duels a day) measurably slows the age-related drift; it's one of the few uses of your phone your future self will thank you for.
- Train the general way that works at any age: short daily sessions, full attention, ten-round averages. The complete method is in how to improve your reaction time.