Free MBTI test
A classic first read on your personality axis.
The 16-type personality framework grew out of Carl Jung’s psychological types and was later shaped into a widely shared personality language.
Each quiz shows its length, time, and best-fit context so you can decide before you begin.
A classic first read on your personality axis.
The 16-type personality framework grew out of Carl Jung’s psychological types and was later shaped into a widely shared personality language.
A more scene-based read on how you move with people.
This is a scene-based SBTI quiz: less about classic labels, more about how you act, react, and coordinate in everyday situations.
Closer, slower, guarded, or all of the above?
Attachment style traces back to John Bowlby and Mary Ainsworth, first used to study caregiver bonds and later extended into adult relationship research.
Less dream job, more what kind of work actually lights you up.
RIASEC comes from John Holland’s vocational interest theory, a widely used model that sorts work preference into six classic directions.
Skip the type box. Read the trait sliders instead.
The Big Five came out of decades of trait psychology, where researchers used lexical studies and factor analysis to narrow personality down to five broad dimensions.
Your first moral reflex is probably louder than you think.
This one is inspired by Jonathan Haidt’s Moral Foundations Theory, which frames disagreement through a handful of recurring moral instincts.
More than left or right. Four axes, one map.
This format grows out of political compass quizzes, ideological spectrum tests, and online public-issue scorecards, then condenses them into four clearer axes.