Mobile speed honor roll
Hall of Fast Websites: 90+ Mobile Performance, Verified
Real Lighthouse scans, ranked by mobile performance score — best first. These are the sites that load before you can blink, the ones treating every visitor like their time matters.
A 90+ mobile score is not luck. It means the team behind the site sweated the LCP, the JavaScript, and the layout shifts. Want your domain on this list? Run a scan.
This Month’s Top 10
Ranked by mobile Performance score (higher is better). Most recent qualifying scan per domain. Prefer not to be featured? Take me off
Updated Apr 20, 2026
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98Desktop: 98
- LCP Largest Contentful Paint. Time until the biggest visible element (hero image, headline) finishes loading. Under 2.5s is good; over 4s is poor.
- 2.1s
- TBT Total Blocking Time. How long the browser was frozen by heavy JavaScript while loading. Under 0.2s is good; over 0.6s is poor.
- 0.1s
- CLS Cumulative Layout Shift. How much the page jumps around while loading. Under 0.1 is good; over 0.25 is poor.
- 0.000
1 hour ago
Fast lane vs. slow lane
Same connection profiles, two very different experiences. The fast lane is our top Hall of Fast Websites entry; the slow lane is the worst-performing site on the Slow Scans board. Hit replay to feel the gap.
Fast lane: temeculasells.com (LCP 2.1s)
Fast lane · temeculasells.com
Slow lane · ibm.com
Durations scale each scan’s Largest Contentful Paint by the profile multiplier, capped at 30 seconds. Real loads vary; the gap doesn’t.
How do websites get listed?
Every site on the Hall of Fast is verified through real Lighthouse scans from pcdrama.com. If your website reaches 90 or higher on mobile, it will be automatically added.
Why a 90+ mobile score matters
Most of the web lives on a phone. Phones run on cellular networks that wobble, throttle, and occasionally pretend to be 3G in the middle of a parking lot. A site that scores 90 or higher on Lighthouse mobile has been engineered to load cleanly on the most hostile reasonable connection.
That kind of score is not luck. It usually means images are sized for the viewport, JavaScript is shipped only when needed, the layout reserves space for everything that loads in late, and the host is sitting behind a CDN that puts content close to the visitor.
Visitors don’t notice fast websites. They just notice that they finished what they came to do. Search engines notice too — Core Web Vitals (LCP, TBT, CLS) feed directly into Google’s ranking signals. The Hall of Fast Websites is, more than anything, proof that the bar is reachable.
Frequently asked questions
How do sites qualify for Hall of Fast Websites?
Any domain we have scanned in the last 30 days that posted a mobile Lighthouse Performance score of 90 or higher is eligible. Ties are broken by the lowest Largest Contentful Paint, then Total Blocking Time, then Cumulative Layout Shift. Best score wins; the latest scan per domain is what counts.
What counts as a qualifying scan?
A mobile-strategy Lighthouse scan that completed without error and produced a Performance score. Timeouts, abandoned scans, and desktop-only runs are excluded from the main Mobile board. Desktop-strategy scans populate the Desktop Honorable Mentions tab. We also drop any domain flagged for removal by its owner.
What does a 90+ mobile score actually mean for real users?
A 90+ score on Lighthouse mobile means the page hits Core Web Vitals targets even on a throttled mid-tier Android phone over a Slow 4G connection. Translation: the site loads cleanly, the layout doesn't jump, and the main content shows up before someone gives up and bounces.
My score dropped below 90 — what happens?
Hall of Fast Websites tracks the most recent scan per domain. If a fresh scan drops below 90, the entry rolls off the next time the leaderboard is computed. Re-run a scan from the scanner page anytime to refresh the number.
Can I request removal from the Hall?
Yes. Use the removal form near the bottom of this page. Approved requests take effect immediately and the same blocklist also keeps the domain off the Slow Scans Leaderboard and the Desktop Honorable Mentions tab.
How often does the Hall update?
Every time a new qualifying scan is logged. The leaderboard is cached at the edge for fast page loads and is invalidated automatically whenever the underlying data changes.
Why does desktop count as “honorable mention”?
Mobile is where most visitors actually are — roughly six in ten US web sessions happen on a phone, and mobile bounce rates punish slow loads harder than desktop. A strong desktop score is real engineering, but the mobile score is the one that moves traffic, rankings, and conversions. Desktop lives on the Honorable Mentions tab so it gets its due without competing with the main board.
Prefer not to be featured?
No hard feelings — we’ll take you off. Submit the domain below and we’ll remove it from both leaderboards.