Real network speed.
Not estimates.

FluxBit is a Windows network meter that reports the bytes that actually crossed the wire — measured from the kernel's own interface counters, not estimated from samples or simulated by speed-test heuristics.

Coming soon to the Microsoft Store

South Africa first. Other regions following.

FluxBit running in its narrow always-visible strip during a speed test: download and upload meters update live, peer list at centre, theme controls, and a scrolling chart on the right that fills in as traffic flows
FluxBit during a real speed test. Recorded directly from a running build, not a mock-up.

What makes it different

Kernel-truth measurements

U: and D: read from GetIfEntry2Ex interface counters — the same source Task Manager and Performance Monitor use. ETW events from Microsoft-Windows-TCPIP add per-connection breakdowns. No userspace sampling, no estimation.

Self-hosted speed test

The line-speed test posts to a FluxBit-controlled server, not Ookla or Cloudflare. Wire-actual upload bytes are read from the interface counter mid-test, so the number you see is what your ISP delivered — not what your kernel send-buffer absorbed.

No telemetry. No account.

FluxBit ships with zero analytics, zero callbacks, zero phone-home. Your history is stored locally in a SQLite database under %APPDATA%\FluxBit. The speed-test server doesn't log visitor IPs.

Built for Windows

Native Win32 GUI, single executable, ~16 MB. Compiles with Go 1.24. Lives in the system tray. AMOLED-true-black theme for OLED displays. 30 Hz smooth chart scrolling on a 1 Hz sample rate.

What we don't do

Full Privacy Policy and End User License Agreement available.