
MBTI 16 Types
40 questions, deep dive
About this test
The MBTI 16-type test sorts your personality along the four axes of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), placing you in one of 16 types from INTJ to ESFP. This test uses 40 questions — 10 per axis.
The four axes are energy (Extraversion E / Introversion I), perception (Sensing S / iNtuition N), judging (Thinking T / Feeling F), and lifestyle (Judging J / Perceiving P). Whichever side is stronger on each axis forms your four-letter type like ESFJ or INFP, and the result shows the type name, three strengths, and cautions.
With 10 balanced items per axis, results are steadier than short tests with only 3 items per axis. That said, MBTI is a tool for self-understanding rather than an absolute label — borderline types (close scores) can shift with your mood, so retaking it later makes your type clearer.
What you'll learn
- Your 4-letter type (e.g. INTJ)
- 3 key strengths
- Things to watch out for
How it works
- 1Answer 40 binary questions.
- 2Each axis is scored.
- 3Your type card is generated.
FAQ
QWhat are the four MBTI axes?
Energy (E extravert / I introvert), perception (S sensing / N intuition), judging (T thinking / F feeling), and lifestyle (J judging / P perceiving). The stronger side on each axis forms your four-letter type.
QHow many questions and how long?
40 questions in total — 10 per axis — taking about 5 minutes.
QWhy does it differ from 12-question tests?
Short tests use 3 items per axis, so one answer flips the type. With 10 items per axis, 40 questions give a far steadier read.
QCan the same person get different results?
Borderline types (close scores on an axis) can shift with your mood. Retaking after a week makes your type clearer.
QHow much should I trust the result?
MBTI is a tool for self-understanding, not a fixed scientific category. Treat it as ‘I tend to lean this way’ rather than a label.





