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Free Identity Assessment

Discover Your Identity Gap

Answer 12 revealing questions to uncover what's holding you back from becoming the person you know you can be — and get a personalized transformation roadmap.

2,847+
People Assessed
94%
Accuracy Rate
3 min
Average Time

Here's what you'll receive in 5 minutes.

Your Identity Gap Score

A number from 1–100 that measures the distance between your current identity and your performed identity — who you actually are vs. who you show up as.

A visual map across 6 life dimensions

Self-Trust · Decision Quality · Values Alignment · Consistency · Environmental Support · Emotional Regulation

You'll see exactly where the gap is largest — and where you're already stronger than you think.

One personalized next step

Not a list of recommendations. One specific action matched to your highest-impact gap. Clear. Actionable. Immediate.

No email required at any point. Your answers are private and not stored.

100% Private
No Email Required
Instant Results
What the Quiz Measures

6 Dimensions of Your Identity

Our 12-question assessment measures your identity clarity across six key dimensions based on research from identity psychology and behavioral science.

Identity Clarity

How clearly you understand who you are, your core values, and the gap between your current and desired self.

3 questions

Environmental Alignment

How well your physical, social, and digital environments support the person you want to become.

1 question

Emotional Regulation

Your ability to process and manage emotions effectively without suppression or avoidance.

1 question

Decision Quality

How confidently and consistently you make decisions aligned with your core values.

1 question

Progress Momentum

Your ability to set goals, follow through, and build resilience through setbacks.

3 questions

Life Alignment

How well your daily actions and routines reflect the person you want to become.

1 question

Based on research from James Clear (Atomic Habits), Robert Kegan (Self-Authorship Theory), and James Gross (Emotion Regulation Research).