To enable an auto clicker, install an app or use Accessibility dwell-click, set the interval and click type, then start it. Steps vary by device.
An auto clicker automates mouse or touch clicks at a set interval or after a brief pause. The method depends on your operating system and whether you need a full-featured macro tool or a simple accessibility aid. Below are the official and most reliable ways to set one up on Android, Windows, Mac, and iOS.
Android: Built‑in Autoclick (Dwell Timing)
Android includes a native accessibility feature called Autoclick (Dwell timing) that triggers a click when you stop moving the cursor. To enable it, open Settings > Accessibility > Cursor & touchpad accessibility > Autoclick (Dwell timing). Turn on Use autoclick. Adjust the Delay before click, Click area, and Ignore minor cursor movement to your preference. From the floating selector you can choose Left‑click, Touch and hold, Right‑click, Double‑click, or Drag. This feature is available on devices running Android 11 or later that support cursor/touchpad input.
Android: Third‑Party App Method
For more granular control or repeated clicks at a single spot, you can install an auto‑clicker from the Google Play Store. Once installed, grant the app Accessibility or Installed apps permission (the exact name varies by Android version). In the app, set the click interval, choose the target area (single or multi‑point), and tap the Enable or Play button. To stop, use the app’s disable button or notification toggle.
Windows: OP Auto Clicker
One of the simplest Windows auto clickers is OP Auto Clicker. Download it from the official site and launch the executable. The getting‑started steps are: set the time interval between clicks, choose the mouse button and type of click (single, double, etc.), set the repeat mode and number of clicks, then select the click location on screen. Click the Start button or press the default hotkey F6 to begin. OP Auto Clicker is compatible with Windows 7, 8, 10, and 64‑bit systems; Windows 11 compatibility hasn’t been officially confirmed.
Mac: MurGaa and GitHub Auto Clickers
For macOS, popular options include MurGaa’s Auto Clicker and the open‑source macos-auto-clicker on GitHub. After installation, open System Settings > Privacy & Security > Input Monitoring and grant permission to the auto‑clicker app. Without this, the app won’t register clicks or keystrokes. In the app, define the click interval, button, and location, then use the custom keyboard shortcut to start/stop.
iPhone / iPad: Switch Control Workaround
Apple doesn’t offer a dedicated auto‑clicker, but you can create a repeating tap with the accessibility feature Switch Control. Go to Settings > Accessibility > Switch Control, add a new switch, and assign it to a custom gesture. You can then create a recipe that loops that gesture up to 10 times. For a more straightforward solution, try a third‑party app like Click Bot – Auto Mouse Clicker from the App Store, which requires enabling the built‑in auto‑tap permission.
| Platform | Method | How to Enable | Key Settings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Android | Built‑in Autoclick (Dwell timing) | Settings → Accessibility → Cursor & touchpad → Autoclick (Dwell timing) → Use autoclick | Delay, click area, ignore cursor movement, click type |
| Android | Third‑party app (e.g., from Play Store) | Install, grant Accessibility permission, configure target & interval, tap Enable | Interval, single/multi target, click type, stop toggle |
| Windows | OP Auto Clicker | Download from official site, set interval/button/repeat, pick location, press F6 | Interval, button, repeat mode, number of clicks, location |
| Mac | MurGaa Auto Clicker / GitHub macos‑auto‑clicker | Install, grant Input Monitoring permission, set triggers, use hotkey | Interval, button, location, hotkey |
| iPhone / iPad | Switch Control (workaround) | Settings → Accessibility → Switch Control → create switch & recipe | Gesture, loop count (max 10), trigger |
| iPhone / iPad | Third‑party app (e.g., Click Bot) | Install from App Store, enable auto‑tap permission, set interval & area, start | Interval, tap location, start/stop control |
| Cross‑platform | General safety | Always download from official sites or trusted stores | — |
Common Setup Mistakes to Avoid
Even with clear steps, a few hiccups trip up most first‑time users. The table below covers the most frequent errors and how to fix them.
| Mistake | Why It Happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Auto clicker doesn’t register clicks on macOS | Input Monitoring permission not granted | Go to System Settings → Privacy & Security → Input Monitoring, enable the auto‑clicker app |
| Android app won’t start clicking | Accessibility permission not fully enabled | Re‑check the app’s toggle in Settings → Accessibility → Installed apps / Services |
| Clicks happen too fast or too slow | Interval not adjusted to user’s need | Increase or decrease the delay (in milliseconds) in the app’s settings |
| Windows auto clicker doesn’t respond to F6 | Another program is using the hotkey | Change the default hotkey in OP Auto Clicker’s settings, or close conflicting software |
| iPhone Switch Control runs the gesture only once | Recipe not set to loop | In Switch Control, edit the recipe and increase the “Repetitions” to up to 10 |
Which Auto Clicker Should You Use?
The best choice depends on your device and your tolerance for setup. If you only need a click after a cursor pause on Android, the built‑in dwell timing is perfect — it requires no extra installation. For repeated clicking at a fixed spot on Windows, OP Auto Clicker is lightweight and free. Mac users should pick MurGaa or the GitHub project; both work well once Input Monitoring is allowed. On iPhone, the Switch Control recipe is limited but does the job for light automation; for heavier use, a third‑party app like Click Bot is more practical.
Google’s official Autoclick (Dwell timing) guide provides additional details on supported devices and advanced settings.
Final Setup Checklist
- Choose your platform: Android, Windows, Mac, or iOS.
- Select the method: built‑in accessibility feature, dedicated app, or Switch Control recipe.
- Enable required permissions: Accessibility, Input Monitoring, or “Installed apps” access.
- Set the click interval (delay) and type (left/right/double).
- Define the target area — a single point, entire screen, or multi‑point sequence.
- Start the clicker using the app’s button or its hotkey (default F6 on OP Auto Clicker).
- Remember: always download from official sources, and be aware that some games and apps ban automated input in their terms of service.
References & Sources
- Google. “Use Autoclick (dwell timing).” Official guide for Android’s built‑in accessibility clicker.
- OP Auto Clicker. “How to get started.” Official setup steps for Windows.
- MurGaa. “Auto Clicker for Mac.” Product page for the macOS auto clicker.
- GitHub – othyn. “macos-auto-clicker.” Open‑source auto clicker for macOS.
- Apple App Store. “Click Bot – Auto Mouse Clicker.” Third‑party iOS auto clicker.
