WhichAmI

Personality Core

The classics, the cult favorites, the new psych frameworks.

This is where the foundational stuff lives. MBTI and its sixteen letter combinations. Big Five for the trait psychologists who think type-based systems are too tidy. Attachment Style for anyone who has been told, gently or otherwise, that their relationship patterns might have roots. Enneagram for the readers who want a story arc, not a label. We rebuild each test from peer-reviewed sources where we can, and from the most widely used public versions where the original is paywalled. The questions get adapted, the scoring stays close to the academic intent, and the result pages explain what the framework actually claims and where it has been criticized. Nothing here is a clinical assessment. We are not diagnosing anything, and a quiz cannot replace a conversation with a therapist or a properly administered inventory. What these tests do well is give you a vocabulary. A frame for noticing why you respond to certain people the way you do, why some work environments drain you, why you keep ending up in the same kinds of arguments. Take two or three, compare the language, see what sticks.

8 quizzes in this category.

Built and maintained by , software engineer who researches personality frameworks

How these quizzes are researched and built

Are you an introvert, extrovert, or ambivert?

Twelve quick questions on how you spend energy, recharge, and connect with the people around you.

12 Qs / ~4 min / 4 takes

MBTI-lite: which 4-letter type are you?

A 12-question version of the classic personality framework. Three minutes. Entertainment, not diagnosis.

12 Qs / ~3 min / 2 takes

What's your attachment style?

Eighteen questions on how you show up in close relationships. For self-reflection, not diagnosis.

18 Qs / ~5 min / 1 takes

How emotionally intelligent are you?

Fifteen honest questions across self-awareness, empathy, and regulation.

15 Qs / ~4 min / 1 takes

What's your love language?

Find out how you give and receive love best, in 21 quick questions.

21 Qs / ~5 min / 0 takes

What's your core value?

Fifteen questions to surface the value that quietly drives most of your choices.

15 Qs / ~4 min / 0 takes

What's your Enneagram type?

Eighteen forced-choice questions to find which of the nine Enneagram types fits you best.

18 Qs / ~5 min / 0 takes

What's your Big Five personality profile?

Fifteen questions on the five traits academic psychology trusts most. Five minutes, no jargon.

15 Qs / ~5 min / 0 takes

Frequently asked about personality core quizzes

Are these personality quizzes the same thing as a clinical assessment?
No. Personality quizzes on WhichAmI are for entertainment and self-reflection only. They can help you notice patterns, learn useful language, and compare how different frameworks describe you. They do not diagnose mental health conditions, replace therapy, or stand in for a proper assessment from a licensed professional. If a result feels important or concerning, treat it as a conversation starter, not a medical conclusion.
How are MBTI-style quizzes different from Big Five personality tests?
MBTI-style quizzes sort people into broad types, which makes the results easy to remember and compare. Big Five tests measure traits on a scale, such as openness or conscientiousness, so they are usually more flexible and better supported by research. Both can be useful, but they answer different questions. Types give you a quick identity label. Trait scores give you a more gradual picture of how you tend to behave.
How accurate are the personality results I get here?
Accuracy depends on the quiz, the framework behind it, and how honestly you answer. A good result should feel specific enough to be useful, but not so final that it boxes you in. Mood, context, and recent experiences can all affect your answers. Think of the result as a well-written summary of your current responses, not a permanent label or a complete map of who you are.
Can I retake a personality quiz if my result feels off?
Yes. Retaking a quiz can be useful if you rushed, misunderstood a question, or answered based on who you wish you were instead of how you usually act. It can also be interesting to retake a quiz months later and see what changed. Try not to chase a preferred result, though. The most useful answers are the ones that reflect your real patterns.
What do you do with my answers and personality quiz data?
Your answers are used to calculate the result you see at the end of the quiz. We aim to keep the experience focused on the quiz itself, not on building a hidden profile about you. If a quiz includes saving, sharing, analytics, or account features, those should be explained in the product and covered by the site's privacy policy. Do not enter anything you would not want stored or processed.