TEST-YO!· PersonalityIPIP-50 · Goldberg 1999
Who Are You, Really?
The only personality framework researchers actually trust. Find your top trait.
- 5 min
- 30 questions
- No signup
- Free
Full result at the end — no email needed
Possible results · which one are you?
- Explorer
- Organiser
- Energiser
- Harmoniser
- Sensitive

About this test
This 30-item Big Five personality test measures Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness and Neuroticism (emotional reactivity). Each trait is probed with 6 items (3 forward-keyed, 3 reverse-keyed) on a 5-point Likert scale, following the structure of the widely used IPIP-NEO short forms.
Methodology
30 self-report items, 6 per Big Five trait, balanced between forward- and reverse-keyed. Each answer on a 5-point Likert scale contributes –2 to +2 to the target trait. The trait with the highest total determines the result archetype.
Related tests
Related reading
The Big Five Personality Traits Explained
What Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness and Neuroticism actually measure — and why researchers trust this model.
How to Interpret Your Big Five Results
A practical guide to reading your OCEAN scores — what percentiles mean, which combinations matter, and common misreadings.
Big Five (OCEAN) vs MBTI: Which Is More Accurate?
A careful comparison of the two most popular personality models — and why researchers largely abandoned MBTI decades ago.
FAQ + disclaimer
What is the Big Five?
A personality framework with five broad trait dimensions: Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness and Neuroticism (emotional reactivity). It's one of the most widely used personality models in psychology research.
How is this test scored?
Each of the 30 items loads on one trait. Forward-keyed items add positive points; reverse-keyed items subtract. The trait with the highest total becomes your dominant trait and your result archetype.
Is this the same as an official Big Five test?
Short Big Five forms like BFI-10 or IPIP-30 follow similar structures but use professionally validated item wordings. This is a free, shorter, self-report indicator — useful for self-reflection, not a clinical instrument.