Built on the Big Five — the only model science trusts
The assessment that tells you what you can't see.
Most personality tests hand you a flattering label. Mirror shows you your trade-offs and the blind spots you didn't know you had — measured, not invented.
50 questions · about 10 minutes · no signup to start
Most tests
16 cute "types" with no scientific backing
Tell you what you want to hear
Generic results anyone could nod at
Stop at "here's who you are"
Mirror
Real Big Five science (public-domain IPIP items)
Names the trade-offs you actually make
Surfaces blind spots specific to your profile
Tells you what to do about them
01
Answer honestly
50 short statements. The less you perform, the more useful it is.
02
See your profile
Where you sit on the five traits, relative to other people.
03
Read your blind spots
The patterns you can't see from the inside — and what to do.
The science, briefly. Mirror scores the five-factor model of personality (the "Big Five"), the most replicated and predictive framework in personality research. Items are drawn from the public-domain International Personality Item Pool (IPIP), maintained by the Oregon Research Institute. This is a self-insight tool, not a clinical diagnosis.
◐ Mirror0 / 50 answered
Describe yourself as you generally are now — honestly, compared to other people of your age. Your answers stay on this device.
◐ Mirror
Your profile
A glimpse of your blind spots
Your full Mirror report
The mirror — a precise portrait of how you operate. Your five core trade-offs, where each trait helps and hurts you. Your three to five biggest blind spots. How your profile shifts under pressure and ambiguity. And the specific moves that work for someone built like you.
You read your caution as prudence; others read it as avoidance. You experience your standards as obvious; the people around you experience them as judgement. These are the gaps Mirror closes.
Unlock your full report
Your blind spots, trade-offs, and what to do — free. Enter your email to read it.
◐ Mirror
Your full report
Knowing the blind spot isn't the same as closing it.
This is where most people stop — and why nothing changes.