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The best chess clock time controls for beginners (and why bullet ruins your game)

March 22, 2026 · 6 min read

If you're under 1500 rapid and you're playing mostly bullet, you are actively making your chess worse. There's a body of evidence — coaching anecdote, plus a couple of decent studies — for this claim. Here's what to play instead.

The short answer: 15+10 if you're under 1500, 10+5 once you're past it

15 minutes base time + 10 seconds increment per move. Sometimes notated G/15;d10 or just "15+10". Why this specific control:

Why bullet (1+0) is poison for beginners

Bullet rewards pattern recall over pattern recognition. That's a problem because, as a beginner, you don't yet have the pattern library. Bullet basically asks you to repeat the moves you already know — it can't teach you new ones because you have no time to see new ones.

The result is a kind of stuck plateau where players bullet-grind themselves to 1200 and then can't budge for a year. Their classical rating, if measured, is usually 200–300 points lower than their bullet rating — and the only way out is to stop and play slow games for 3 months.

The full beginner's chess time-control ladder

RatingRecommendedAcceptableAvoid
< 80030+0 or 25+1015+10Anything < 10+0
800–120015+1010+51+0, 2+1
1200–150015+10, 10+55+5, 3+21+0
1500–180010+55+3, 3+2
1800+Whatever you enjoy

Past 1800 you have enough patterns that bullet stops actively hurting you — though most strong players still mix in classical for serious training.

Fischer vs Bronstein vs delay

If your clock supports increment types, here's the short version:

For beginners, the differences don't matter — pick whatever your platform defaults to. The base time + an increment of any kind is what counts.

Open the free online chess clock →


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