When facing a great challenge, your deepest instinct is to...
About this assessment
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Jungian Archetype Test
Take the free Jungian Archetype test online. Discover which of 12 universal archetypes drives your personality, Hero, Sage, Creator & more. 24 questions, instant results.
Free · Mapped to 2,536 careersInstant results · 10 min
What Is the Jungian Archetypes?
Carl Jung's 12 archetypes represent universal patterns of human motivation and behavior found across all cultures, myths, and stories throughout history. Jung argued that these patterns live in the collective unconscious, a shared layer of the psyche we're all born with, which is why the same figures keep reappearing in fairy tales, religion, films, and advertising. From the Hero who seeks mastery to the Sage who pursues truth, each archetype reveals the deep narrative structure of your personality: the role you instinctively play in the story of your own life, and the core motivation, fear, and gift that come with it.
The 12 archetypes are organized into four orientation groups defined by what each one ultimately wants. Ego types (Hero, Magician, Outlaw) want to leave a mark on the world. Order types (Caregiver, Ruler, Creator) want to provide structure and stability. Social types (Lover, Jester, Everyman) want to connect and belong. Freedom types (Innocent, Sage, Explorer) want independence and meaning. Most people lead with one dominant archetype, supported by two or three secondaries that surface in specific situations, at work, in relationships, under stress. This blend is what makes your profile yours rather than a single label.
JobCannon's 24-question assessment identifies your dominant archetype, your supporting archetypes, and the shadow archetype that trips you up when you're stressed or threatened. The 12-archetype model was popularized for modern use by Carol Pearson and Margaret Mark (whose framework underpins the Pearson-Marr Archetype Indicator and the brand archetypes used across marketing), and it's most useful as a lens for self-reflection, storytelling, and career direction rather than as a clinical diagnostic. Whether you're trying to understand your leadership style, choose work that feels authentic, or simply see your own patterns more clearly, your archetype gives you a story-shaped map, free, instant, no signup.
What You'll Discover
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Your dominant archetype and its core motivation, deepest fear, and natural gift
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Your secondary archetypes and how they blend into a profile that's uniquely yours
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Your shadow archetype, the unconscious pattern that sabotages you under stress
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Career roles and industries where your archetype naturally thrives
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How your archetype shapes your leadership voice and communication style
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Which archetypes complement yours, and which ones tend to clash, in relationships and teams
What a Question Looks Like
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Frequently Asked Questions
What are the 12 Jungian archetypes?
The 12 archetypes are: Innocent, Sage, Explorer, Outlaw (Rebel), Magician, Hero, Lover, Jester, Everyman (Regular Person), Caregiver, Ruler, and Creator. Each represents a universal pattern of motivation and behavior that appears across cultures, literature, and mythology. Every archetype is defined by three things: a core desire (what it wants most), a core fear (what it most wants to avoid), and a gift (the strength it brings to the world). For example, the Hero desires to prove worth through courage and fears weakness, while the Sage desires truth and fears being deceived.
What are the four archetype orientation groups?
The 12 archetypes sort into four groups based on their deepest driver. Ego (Hero, Magician, Outlaw), the drive to leave a mark and master the world. Order (Caregiver, Ruler, Creator), the drive to provide structure, control, and care. Social (Lover, Jester, Everyman), the drive to connect and belong. Freedom (Innocent, Sage, Explorer), the drive for independence, meaning, and discovery. Knowing your group explains why two people with different archetypes can still feel deeply aligned: they often share the same underlying orientation.
What is a shadow archetype?
Your shadow is the side of an archetype you suppress or deny, the pattern that leaks out under stress, pressure, or threat. Jung believed integrating the shadow (becoming aware of it rather than disowning it) is central to psychological maturity. For instance, a Caregiver's shadow can show up as martyrdom and guilt-tripping; a Ruler's shadow as control and rigidity; a Hero's shadow as arrogance and the need to make everything a battle. The test surfaces your likely shadow so you can recognize it instead of being run by it.
How are archetypes used in career development?
Your dominant archetype reveals your natural leadership style, communication approach, and motivational drivers, which is why archetype-fit predicts how engaged and authentic you feel at work. Rulers gravitate toward management and operations, Creators toward design and innovation, Sages toward research, analysis, and teaching, Caregivers toward healthcare, HR, and education, Outlaws toward disruption and entrepreneurship. Aligning your work with your archetype doesn't just help you perform, it makes the work feel like an extension of who you are rather than a costume you put on each morning.
Can I have more than one archetype?
Yes, everyone expresses multiple archetypes in different proportions. You have a dominant archetype that drives most of your behavior, plus two or three secondary archetypes that emerge in specific contexts: one at work, another in close relationships, another when you're under pressure. The test reveals your full archetype profile and the blend between them, not just the single primary label. That blend is what makes the result feel specific to you rather than a horoscope-style generalization.
Can my archetype change over time?
Your core archetype tends to be stable, but the way it expresses, and which secondary archetypes come forward, shifts with life stage and circumstance. Jung described individuation as a lifelong process: an Explorer in their twenties may grow into a Sage or Ruler as responsibilities accumulate; a Caregiver may reclaim the Lover or Jester after years of putting others first. Retaking the test at different life chapters often reveals which archetype is currently leading and which is being neglected.
How are Jungian archetypes different from MBTI types?
MBTI maps cognitive preferences, how you take in information and make decisions. Archetypes map narrative motivation, the role you naturally play in life's story and what drives you to act. Many people pair the two: MBTI explains how you think, your archetype explains why you act. An INTJ Ruler and an INTJ Sage think alike but pursue very different goals. Both frameworks are most useful taken together, which is why the result links to our MBTI test if you want the cognitive layer too.
What's the difference between the 12 brand archetypes and Jung's original archetypes?
They're the same 12 archetypes applied to two different purposes. Jung described archetypes as patterns in the human psyche. Carol Pearson and Margaret Mark, in The Hero and the Outlaw (2001), adapted that framework to branding, showing that beloved brands consistently embody one archetype (the Outlaw for Harley-Davidson, the Innocent for Dove, the Magician for Disney). So when you see 'brand archetypes,' it's the same Hero, Sage, and Caregiver from Jung, just used to explain why certain brands feel emotionally consistent. This test measures the personal version: which archetype drives you.
Is the Jungian archetype test scientifically valid?
Honest answer: archetypes are a depth-psychology framework, not a clinical psychometric instrument like the Big Five. They aren't designed to produce a validated numeric score the way the Big Five or a Holland Code is. Their value is interpretive, a structured, time-tested vocabulary (60+ years of use in therapy, literature, and brand strategy) for understanding your motivations and story. If you want a research-validated trait measure, take our Big Five test; if you want a meaningful narrative lens on why you do what you do, the archetype test is built for exactly that. The two complement each other.
Which archetype is the rarest or most common?
There's no reliable global population data on archetype frequency, anyone quoting exact percentages is guessing, so we won't invent a number. What's more useful: archetype distribution shifts by context. Ruler and Caregiver archetypes tend to show up more often in management and care professions; Creator and Outlaw in the arts and startups; Sage and Explorer in research and academia. Rather than chasing 'rarity,' the insight is fit, whether your dominant archetype matches the environment you spend your days in.
Do I need to sign up to take the test?
No. You can take all 24 questions, see your dominant archetype, your secondary blend, and your shadow, all without an account, an email, or any personal information. Results appear instantly on screen, and there's no paywall hidden after the questions. A free account is optional: it lets you save your result, retake later to see how your archetype evolves, and compare against your MBTI, Big Five, or Enneagram results. But it's never required to use the test itself.
How is this different from a 'which character are you' quiz?
A character quiz matches you to a fictional figure for fun; an archetype test maps you to one of 12 structural patterns that those characters are themselves built from. Luke Skywalker is a Hero, Gandalf is a Sage, Mary Poppins is a Caregiver, the archetype is the underlying blueprint, not the costume. That's why archetype results travel: they tell you something about your motivations, blind spots, and ideal work that holds up outside the quiz, instead of just a shareable label.
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24 questions · 10 min · Result with matching careers from 2,536-profile database