Free stress test

How stressed are you? A 2-minute stress test (PSS).

This free stress test uses the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10), the most widely used measure of how stressful you find your life. It asks how often, over the last month, you've felt overwhelmed or in control. You get a validated stress score from 0 to 40. It's a self-reflection, not a diagnosis.

This is a self-reflection check, not a diagnosis. Your answers stay on your device. Nothing is saved unless you choose to share or book.
0 of 10 answered

In the last month, how often have you…

Question 1 of 10
Question 1. Been upset because of something that happened unexpectedly?
Question 2 of 10
Question 2. Felt that you were unable to control the important things in your life?
Question 3 of 10
Question 3. Felt nervous and stressed?
Question 4 of 10
Question 4. Felt confident about your ability to handle your personal problems?
Question 5 of 10
Question 5. Felt that things were going your way?
Question 6 of 10
Question 6. Found that you could not cope with all the things you had to do?
Question 7 of 10
Question 7. Been able to control irritations in your life?
Question 8 of 10
Question 8. Felt that you were on top of things?
Question 9 of 10
Question 9. Been angered because of things that happened outside your control?
Question 10 of 10
Question 10. Felt difficulties were piling up so high you could not overcome them?

This is a screening tool, not a diagnosis. The PSS measures how stressful you perceive your life to be. If you're struggling, talking to a professional helps.

Cohen S, Kamarck T, Mermelstein R. A global measure of perceived stress. Journal of Health and Social Behavior. 1983;24(4):385-396. The PSS is in the public domain.

What this stress test measures

This free stress test uses the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10), developed by Sheldon Cohen, the most widely used psychological measure of stress. It doesn't ask about specific events; it asks how unpredictable, uncontrollable, and overloaded your life has felt over the last month. That 'perceived' part is the point, the same situation stresses people differently.

Your answers produce a score from 0 to 40. Some questions are reverse-scored, so the tool does the maths for you. It takes about two minutes and is a self-reflection, not a diagnosis.

What your stress score means

The PSS sorts your total into three bands. There's no clinical cut-off, but higher scores mean more perceived stress and a bigger case for protecting your recovery.

PSS-10 score ranges
ScoreLevelWhat it usually means
0–13Low stressYou're managing the pressures on you reasonably well.
14–26Moderate stressA noticeable load. Worth tending before it builds.
27–40High stressA heavy load that's worth real support, the kind therapy helps with.

Common questions

What is the PSS stress test?

The Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10) is a validated 10-question measure of how stressful you find your life, developed by Sheldon Cohen and colleagues in 1983. It scores from 0 to 40. It is in the public domain and is the most widely used stress measure in research.

What is a high PSS score?

Roughly, 0 to 13 is low stress, 14 to 26 is moderate, and 27 to 40 is high. There is no fixed clinical cut-off, but higher scores mean more perceived stress and a stronger case for support.

What's the difference between stress and anxiety?

Stress is usually a response to an external pressure and tends to ease when the pressure does. Anxiety is more internal and can persist without an obvious trigger. They overlap, and ongoing high stress can feed anxiety.

Is this stress test a diagnosis?

No. The PSS is a screening tool, not a diagnosis. It runs in your browser and your answers are not saved unless you choose to get in touch.

Sources

  • Cohen S, Kamarck T, Mermelstein R. A global measure of perceived stress. Journal of Health and Social Behavior. 1983;24(4):385-396.
  • The PSS is in the public domain. ElloMind reproduces the PSS-10 without modification.