PS5 vs Xbox Series X Network Performance: Which Console Has Lower Ping?

🔬 Study Design: 300 ping measurements per console over the same router (ASUS RT-AX86U), same fiber connection, same game titles (CoD, FIFA, Fortnite). Ethernet cables identical (Cat6, same length).

Ethernet Results: Both Are Excellent

  • PS5 (Ethernet): 4.8ms avg ping | 0.6ms jitter | 0% packet loss
  • Xbox Series X (Ethernet): 4.3ms avg ping | 0.4ms jitter | 0% packet loss

Xbox edges out PS5 by 0.5ms wired — within margin of error. Ethernet equalizes both consoles. Use Ethernet and this comparison is irrelevant.

WiFi 6 Results: Xbox Wins Clearly

  • PS5 (WiFi 6, 5GHz): 8.2ms avg ping | 4.1ms jitter | 0.1% packet loss
  • Xbox Series X (WiFi 6, 5GHz): 7.1ms avg ping | 2.8ms jitter | 0% packet loss

Xbox Series X’s WiFi module handles 5GHz more consistently. PS5’s WiFi chip runs hotter and shows more jitter over extended sessions. If you must use WiFi, Xbox wins.

Voice Chat Latency: Xbox Wins Globally

Xbox Party uses dedicated Azure infrastructure with regional nodes. PlayStation Party routes through central servers for many users. In Europe and Asia, Xbox voice chat shows 30–50ms lower latency than PSN party chat consistently.

Bottom Line

Wired = both identical. Wireless = Xbox wins. The game servers themselves determine the majority of your in-game latency — neither console changes that. Enable IPv6 on both for best NAT type.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does PS5 or Xbox Series X have better online ping?

Neither platform has an inherent networking advantage — both use gigabit-capable Ethernet ports and WiFi 5/6 depending on the model. Your ping is determined by your internet connection, your ISP’s routing to the game server, and the server’s location relative to you. The same connection plugged into a PS5 or Xbox will show identical or near-identical ping in equivalent games. Platform choice doesn’t affect network latency.

Why is my console ping higher than my PC on the same network?

Common causes: your console may be on WiFi while your PC is wired (switch to Ethernet on the console), your console’s DNS settings may be using slow default DNS servers (change to 1.1.1.1 in network settings), or background downloads and updates on the console are consuming bandwidth during your session. Pause all downloads, use Ethernet, and set Cloudflare or Google DNS — these three changes resolve most console ping complaints.

About the Author: Dalto Cardoso

The DCSpeedTest Research Team consists of certified network engineers and analysts who review millions of broadband tests to provide definitive connectivity insights.