Written and programmed by Fergus Duniho
Questions Last Revised: 2 April 2002
This is a short, 21-question test for finding out your Enneagram personality type. This test attempts to identify your Enneagram type by identifying which triadic groups your type belongs to. As a virtually new endeavor, it comes with no guarantee of reliability. Take it with a healthy dose of skepticism. If you use it only as a tool for suggesting what type you might be, then you will be using it responsibly.
Begun in January 2001, it will be regularly updated in an evolutionary manner. When anyone reports his or her Enneagram type while taking this test, data is recorded for statistical evaluation of how accurate each question is. For your privacy, this data does not identify who you are. At each update, the most accurate questions will be kept, and the least accurate will be replaced with new questions.
The Triadic Enneagram Test is the successor of the Duniho Enneagram Test. The TET tests for four triads rather than two, and it identifies your type by an overall score, rather than by consulting a table. The TET is rooted in my own Enneagram theory, which is based on the work of Riso & Hudson, Hurley & Dobson, and others. So that it doesn't influence your test results, I will provide you with a link to the theory only after you take the test.
You will be asked a few background questions (which are purely for statistical purposes) and a set of 28 multiple choice questions with 3 answers each. If you already know your Enneagram type, it will help me out a lot if you indicate in the background questions what your Enneagram type is. This is essential information for evaluating the accuracy of each question.
After you answer all the questions, press the submit button to find out how you scored. Bear in mind that only you, and not this or any test, can best identify your Enneagram type. To use this test responsibly, you should use it as a tool for helping your figure out what your Enneagram type might be, not as an infallible oracle that will tell you who you are.
1. This test is experimental. It goes through new trials periodically. With each trial, several of the weakest questions are replaced with new questions that are completely untested and have no record of reliability. The general aim is to replace bad questions with better questions, but sometimes the bad questions are replaced with even worse questions. Fortunately, these get weeded out quickly, but it can sometimes take a while to find the better questions. Statistics on this and all previous trials are found on the Statistics page.
2. No personality test can claim infallibility. Your personality type is not how you score on a test. Even if the test gets it right, which it may, it is up to you to confirm whether it is right. Any personality test is nothing but a diagnostic tool, and it is up you to use it responsibly. No personality test is a substitute for looking into yourself and finding out who you are.
3. Even assuming that questions are well-chosen, the accuracy of your results will depend on the accuracy of the information you supply about yourself. If you don't already have some awareness and understanding of your personality, you may well score as a type you're not.
With these caveats mentioned, take a few moments to take the test and find out what you may be. The test is very short, one of the shortest personality tests ever. So it won't take long to take. The order of the questions is randomized, and your results will be automatically calculated for you.
Please answer these background questions if you can. Your answers will be used to help me evaluate the accuracy of the questions, so that I may make future versions of the TET more reliable.