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About this assessment
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Enneagram Personality Test
Take the free Enneagram personality test online. Discover your core type (1-9), wing, and growth path. 36 questions, instant results with career and relationship insights.
Free · Mapped to 2,536 careersInstant results · 7 min
What Is the Enneagram?
The Enneagram is a personality system that identifies nine core types, each driven by a distinct motivation, basic fear, and basic desire. Its defining strength is that it explains why you do what you do, not just what you do, two people can behave the same way for completely different underlying reasons, and the Enneagram is built to tell those reasons apart. The nine types sit on a nine-pointed figure (the 'ennea-gram'), and the lines connecting them describe how your behavior shifts under stress and in growth, making it one of the most dynamic maps of personality in use today.
The nine types group into three 'centers of intelligence' based on the dominant emotion that drives them: the Gut/Body center (types 8, 9, 1, organized around anger and control), the Heart center (types 2, 3, 4, organized around shame and image), and the Head center (types 5, 6, 7, organized around fear and security). Your type is further shaped by a 'wing', one of the two adjacent types that flavors your core (e.g. a Type 4 can lean 4w3 'The Aristocrat' or 4w5 'The Bohemian'), and by your instinctual subtype (self-preservation, social, or sexual/one-to-one), which determines where your energy goes day to day.
JobCannon's 36-question Enneagram test (4 questions per type) pinpoints your core type and wing, then maps your stress and growth directions, your characteristic strengths and traps, and the work environments and relationships where your type thrives. It's grounded in the same Riso-Hudson framework used in professional instruments like the RHETI, delivered free, instantly, with no account or email required.
What You'll Discover
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Your core Enneagram type (1-9) and its driving motivation, basic fear, and basic desire
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Your wing type and how it uniquely flavors your core personality
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Your center of intelligence, Gut, Heart, or Head, and the core emotion that drives you
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Your growth and stress arrows, how you behave at your best and worst
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Career environments where your type naturally excels
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How your type connects and clashes with others in work and relationships
What a Question Looks Like
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When you see something done incorrectly, you feel compelled to fix it
36 questions, 7 min. Auto-advance — no manual Next.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What are the 9 Enneagram types?
The nine types are: 1-Reformer/Perfectionist (principled, self-controlled), 2-Helper (caring, generous), 3-Achiever (ambitious, image-conscious), 4-Individualist (creative, introspective), 5-Investigator (analytical, private), 6-Loyalist (committed, security-seeking), 7-Enthusiast (spontaneous, busy), 8-Challenger (powerful, assertive), and 9-Peacemaker (easygoing, accommodating). Each type is defined by a basic fear and a basic desire, for example, Type 6 fears being without support and desires security, while Type 4 fears having no identity and desires to be uniquely themselves.
What are the three Enneagram centers?
The nine types split into three 'centers of intelligence,' each organized around a core emotion. The Gut/Body center (8, 9, 1) is driven by anger and the issue of control. The Heart/Feeling center (2, 3, 4) is driven by shame and the issue of image and identity. The Head/Thinking center (5, 6, 7) is driven by fear and the issue of security. Knowing your center explains the emotional 'weather' underneath your type, why a 5 and a 7 can look very different yet both be wrestling with fear.
What is an Enneagram wing?
Your wing is one of the two types adjacent to your core type that adds nuance to your personality. For example, a Type 4 can have a 3-wing (4w3, often called 'The Aristocrat') or a 5-wing (4w5, 'The Bohemian'), each creating a distinct subtype. Most people lean noticeably toward one wing, though a few sit balanced between both. Your wing doesn't change your core type, it shades how that type expresses itself.
What are the stress and growth arrows?
Each type is connected by lines to two other types on the Enneagram: one it moves toward under stress (disintegration) and one it moves toward in growth (integration). For example, a healthy Type 1 takes on the spontaneity of a 7, while a stressed Type 1 takes on the moodiness of a 4. These arrows are what make the Enneagram dynamic rather than a fixed box, they describe how you actually shift across good days and bad.
What is a tritype?
Tritype is an extension of the model (developed by Katherine Fauvre) suggesting you have a dominant type in each of the three centers, Gut, Heart, and Head, not just one overall. Your tritype is the three numbers combined (e.g. 4-7-9), with your core type leading. It's a more advanced lens; if you're new to the Enneagram, start with your core type and wing, then explore tritype later once your main type feels solid.
What are instinctual subtypes (sp, so, sx)?
Beyond your number, the Enneagram describes three instinctual drives: self-preservation (sp, focus on safety, health, resources), social (so, focus on group, status, belonging), and sexual/one-to-one (sx, focus on intensity and close bonds). Most people have a dominant instinct that colors how their type shows up, an sp-7 chases comfort and security, an sx-7 chases stimulation and connection. It's why two people of the same type can feel quite different.
Is the Enneagram scientifically valid?
Honest answer: the Enneagram has growing but still limited empirical support compared to the Big Five. Validated instruments like the RHETI show reasonable reliability, and the motivational framework resonates strongly in coaching and therapy, but it's studied far less rigorously than trait models, and it shouldn't be used for hiring. We present it as a powerful tool for self-understanding and growth, not a clinical diagnosis. For a research-grade trait profile, pair it with our Big Five test.
How is the Enneagram different from MBTI?
MBTI describes how you think and process, your cognitive preferences. The Enneagram describes why you act, your core motivations, fears, and defensive patterns. MBTI is fairly static; the Enneagram is dynamic, mapping how you change under stress and growth. Many people find them complementary: MBTI for communication and work style, Enneagram for emotional patterns and personal development. Taking both gives a fuller picture than either alone.
Can my Enneagram type change over time?
Your core type is generally considered fixed for life, it reflects a deep, early-formed motivational structure. What changes is your level of health within that type, and which wing or arrow is most active. As you grow, you express the healthy side of your type more often and integrate the strengths of your growth arrow; under stress you slide toward your stress point. So you don't change types, but you can change dramatically how your type shows up.
Which Enneagram type is rarest or most common?
There's no reliable global census of Enneagram types, distributions vary by sample and self-typing is imperfect, so we won't quote a precise percentage. Type 9 is often reported as one of the more common self-typings and some Heart/Head types as less common, but treat any frequency claim with caution. Rarity carries no value judgment: every type has its own gifts and growth edges.
How long does the Enneagram test take?
JobCannon's Enneagram test has 36 questions (4 per type) and takes about 7 minutes. Questions auto-advance as you answer, and you'll get your core type, wing, centers, and a detailed profile instantly.
Do I need to sign up to take the test?
No. You can take all 36 questions and see your core type, wing, center, and full profile without an account, email, or any personal information, and there's no paywall after the questions. A free account is optional: it saves your result, lets you retake later to track growth, and lets you compare your type against your MBTI, Big Five, or Jungian archetype results.
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36 questions · 7 min · Result with matching careers from 2,536-profile database