DOM size

How many elements the DOM holds after load.

Field data PhoneDesktopAll Scope All sites Q2 2026 edition · All devices field outcomes
Metric LCP INP CLS
1

At a glance the headline numbers for DOM size

How many elements the DOM holds after load.

695
on the typical site
half of sites sit at or below
1,202
1 in 4 sites exceed this
the top quarter
6,465
the heaviest 1%
the long tail
180,684
sites measured
all-device field data

The typical page contains 695 DOM elements.

The State of Web Vitals · Q2 2026 · 189,915 sites · all devices field datacorewebvitals.io/state-of-cwv
2

Distribution & median LCP site count and median LCP at each level of DOM size

0ms 750ms 1500ms 2250ms 3000ms
2.5s
0 35627 71254
1–2 3–6 7–13 14–31 32–73 74–172 173–407 408–959 960–2264 2265–5340 >p98
Good (≤2.5s) Needs improvement Poor (>4s) Site count
The State of Web Vitals · Q2 2026 · 189,915 sites · all devices field datacorewebvitals.io/state-of-cwv
3

Passing LCP by DOM size which level passes the LCP most often

DOM sizeSitesPassing LCPLCP
3–6 1,155 83% 1.5s
7–13 1,377 82% 1.3s
14–31 1,685 82% 1.4s
32–73 3,660 83% 1.3s
74–172 9,125 86% 1.2s
173–407 30,587 90% 1.3s
408–959 71,254 83% 1.5s
960–2264 46,335 78% 1.7s
2265–5340 11,892 80% 1.6s
>p98 3,613 78% 1.7s
Good Needs Improvement Poor Faded rows: under 100 sites

DOM size 695. p75 1,202. p99 6,465. At the low end (3–6): LCP 1.5s. At the high end (>p98): LCP 1.7s. computed

The State of Web Vitals · Q2 2026 · 189,915 sites · all devices field datacorewebvitals.io/state-of-cwv
4

Why this matters for the Core Web Vitals, and where to start fixing it

A large DOM makes rendering work scale with the page. That hits two Core Web Vitals. The interaction side is INP. A click usually changes the DOM. Before the browser can paint the result it has to recalculate styles and update the layout. More elements means more work in that recalculation, so the response to every click lags. This cost repeats on every interaction for the whole session.

The loading side is LCP. On the first render the browser parses, styles and lays out every element, even the ones below the fold. The main content waits for that work (render delay in the LCP). If the page only rendered what is visible, the first paint and every later click would be faster. Pagination, virtualization and fewer wrapper divs all work towards that.

How does DOM size affect the Core Web Vitals?

DOM elements correlate with the INP. On the smallest pages, 89% of sites pass the INP. On the biggest pages, 83% do. The decline is gradual. There is no point where sites suddenly start failing.

Related signals Iframes per page → Media source → Image fetchpriority → Uses @import → Chrome field data from 189,915 sites, representing millions of real page loads · How we measured