MBTI quick test — 28 questions, 5 minutes, get your 4-letter type with detailed reading.
- Runs locally
- Category Text
- Best for Removing repetitive cleanup work from everyday writing and operations.
28 questions, ~5 minutes. Pick how strongly each statement feels true for you. There are no "right" answers — go with your first instinct.
- Q1At a party, I find it easy to walk up and chat with strangers.
- Q2After a day of being with people, I need solo time to recharge.
- Q3I usually rehearse what I want to say in my head before saying it.
- Q4Thinking out loud actually helps me figure things out.
- Q5I prefer a small-circle deep talk over a big crowded party.
- Q6I am often the person who gets the room energized.
- Q7A few hours alone in silence feels like a treat, not a punishment.
- Q8I trust facts I can see and measure more than abstract theories.
- Q9I often think about "what does this really mean underneath".
- Q10When I look at a project, I automatically imagine how it could evolve in the future.
- Q11I prefer step-by-step, following a proven procedure.
- Q12I often run several "what if..." scenarios in my head at once.
- Q13I prefer concrete examples to abstract concepts when explaining.
- Q14I am naturally drawn to patterns, metaphors, and analogies.
- Q15When deciding, I first ask which option is most logically sound.
- Q16I instinctively consider how the decision will affect the people involved.
- Q17When someone is upset, I tend to get pulled into the same feeling.
- Q18In an argument, I can set feelings aside to win the logical point.
- Q19I believe harmony is worth protecting more than being technically right.
- Q20People sometimes tell me I am "logical to the point of cold".
- Q21Even an optimal plan makes me hesitate if it hurts people.
- Q22I like to set the itinerary in advance — not a fan of "let's wing it".
- Q23Unfinished tasks sitting on my desk make me physically uncomfortable.
- Q24I naturally prefer "wait and see, more options may show up".
- Q25My desktop / room is usually orderly.
- Q26The night before a deadline is usually when I get most done.
- Q27I love checklists and the small joy of ticking things off.
- Q28A disrupted plan does not stress me out — it often gets more interesting.
What this tool does
A free in-browser MBTI personality test you can finish in five minutes — 28 forced-choice statements (seven per dichotomy: E/I, S/N, T/F, J/P), each rated on a seven-point Likert scale from "strongly agree" to "strongly disagree". The engine adds up your preference scores across the four Myers-Briggs dichotomies, calls the type (one of the classic sixteen — INTJ, ENFP, ISFP, ESTJ and the rest), and shows both the four-letter result and the percentage / strength of each preference so you can see how clear-cut (or how close to the line) your type actually is. The reading for each of the sixteen types includes a paraphrased description, strengths, blind spots, and careers people of that type often gravitate toward — paraphrased from public, non-trademarked summaries (Myers-Briggs Foundation public materials and the open 16Personalities-style consensus), NOT LLM-invented "sounds-MBTI-but-actually-made-up" content. Permanent disclaimer at the top of the page: MBTI is a self-report instrument for personal reflection, NOT a clinical diagnosis, NOT a hiring or promotion filter, and the test-retest reliability literature is mixed — treat the result as a conversation starter, not a verdict. 100% client-side — your answers never leave your browser, no email, no signup, no "your result will be sent to" upsell trap.
Tool details
- Input
- Form fields
- The page exposes text boxes, numeric controls, file pickers, or structured inputs depending on the tool.
- Output
- Live result
- The result area focuses on usable output, with copy, download, or preview actions when supported.
- Privacy
- Browser-side processing
- The main tool logic does not call an external API, so inputs normally stay in the current tab.
- Save / share
- No account required
- Open the page and use it; whether results survive refresh depends on the tool.
- Performance budget
- Initial JS <= 30 KB
- No WASM budget is declared, keeping the tool quick to open on mobile.
- Best fit
- Text · Content Creator
- Category and role tags drive related tools, internal links, and quick fit checks.
How to use
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1. Input
Paste or drop your content into the tool panel.
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2. Process
Click the button. All processing is local in your browser.
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3. Copy / Download
Copy the result or download to disk in one click.
How MBTI Quick Test (28 Questions, 16 Personality Types) fits into your work
Use it to clean, compare, reshape, or extract plain text before it goes into a document, CMS, spreadsheet, or prompt.
Text jobs
- Removing repetitive cleanup work from everyday writing and operations.
- Making text easier to compare, paste, publish, or feed into another tool.
- Working with content locally when the text is private or unfinished.
Text checks
- Scan for unintended whitespace, duplicate lines, and lost punctuation.
- For long text, test the first few lines before applying the whole change.
- Copy the final output only after checking the preview.
Good next steps
These links move the current task into a more complete workflow.
- 1 Dream Interpretation Dictionary (Zhougong + Jung) Dream dictionary — search dream symbols and meanings (Chinese 周公解梦 + Jungian). Open
- 2 Western Zodiac Calculator (Sun Sign) Western zodiac calculator — your sign, element, ruling planet, compatibility, daily traits. Open
- 3 Chinese Zodiac Sign Checker (Sheng Xiao) Chinese zodiac checker — your animal sign, element, compatibility, lucky numbers/colors by birth year. Open
Real-world use cases
Settle the office "are you an E or an I" debate in five minutes
Your team did a personality round at the offsite and three people insisted they were extraverts who "just need recharge time". Have everyone take the 28-question test on their phone and read the E/I percentage out loud. The two folks who came back 54% I, 46% E got their answer: they lean introvert, barely. The percentage stops the argument better than any vibe-based guess.
Sanity-check a borderline type before quoting it in your bio
You've been calling yourself an INTJ for years off one quiz you half-remember. Retake this in five minutes and you find J comes out 51% to 49% P. That single axis is a coin flip, so writing "INTJ" in your dating profile or LinkedIn is overstating a 51% lean. Read both the INTJ and INTP summaries, pick the one that actually sounds like you, and stop treating the four letters as a fixed ID number.
Run an icebreaker for a new study group without buying anything
Six students meet for the first time before a group project. Instead of awkward name rounds, everyone takes the test (no signup, no email) and shares their type plus their strongest axis. The two who came out clear-J volunteer to own the timeline; the clear-P person owns brainstorming scope. It takes eight minutes total and gives the group a shared vocabulary for who naturally does what.
Compare your result honestly against the official paid version
Your company is about to spend $50 a head on a certified MBTI Step I session and you want to know roughly where you'll land first. This 28-item short form won't match the 93-item instrument exactly, especially on axes that come out slight. Take it, note which axes are "clear" versus "slight", and walk into the paid session knowing your three stable letters and your one wobbly one, so you read the printout critically instead of swallowing it whole.
Common pitfalls
Treating a 51/49 axis as solid. If J beats P by two points, that letter is a coin flip — read both neighbor types (e.g. ESTJ and ESTP), do not tattoo the four-letter code on.
Overthinking each item to "answer correctly". The test wants your first instinct; spending 15 minutes per question makes you answer who you wish you were, not who you are, and the result gets less accurate, not more.
Using the result to screen a hire or pick a partner. MBTI is a reflection prompt, not a filter — its retest reliability is mixed, so a recruiter rejecting an "ISTP" or a person dumping an "INFP" is acting on noise.
Privacy
This test runs entirely in your browser. Your 28 answers, the computed per-dichotomy scores, and your four-letter type are calculated on your device and never sent to any server — there is no email field, no signup, and no "we'll mail your full report" upsell. If you share a result link, only your final type and preference percentages travel in the URL so the recipient sees the same reading; your individual question-by-question answers are not encoded and are never stored anywhere.
FAQ
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