Find out if impostor syndrome is secretly undermining your confidence and success. 15 questions, instant results.
Impostor syndrome is the persistent, nagging belief that you are not as capable as others think, and that your success is somehow undeserved or fraudulent, despite real evidence of your competence. People experiencing it often feel like impostors waiting to be exposed, attributing their achievements to luck, timing, or having fooled people rather than to their own ability. What makes it so painful is the gap between external reality, genuine accomplishment, and internal experience, a deep sense of inadequacy. Understanding impostor syndrome as a common pattern of distorted self-perception, rather than an accurate read on your abilities, is the first step toward loosening its grip.
One of the cruel ironies of impostor syndrome is that it disproportionately affects capable, conscientious, high-achieving people. Those who care deeply about doing well, who hold high standards, and who are aware of how much they do not know are often the most prone to it. The very qualities that drive achievement, conscientiousness, humility, self-scrutiny, can fuel the sense of not being good enough. Recognising that impostor feelings are common precisely among accomplished people, rather than a sign of genuine inadequacy, can be a powerful reframe for anyone caught in the pattern.
Impostor syndrome persists partly through a bias in how you process evidence. Successes are explained away, attributed to luck, ease, or deception, while failures and shortcomings are taken as proof of your true inadequacy. This selective accounting means that no amount of achievement quite registers, since the wins are discounted as they arrive. Noticing this pattern, the way you dismiss evidence of your competence while magnifying evidence of your flaws, is key, because it reveals impostor feelings as a distortion in interpretation rather than an accurate measure of your worth or ability.
Because impostor feelings are usually hidden, they can be profoundly isolating; everyone else appears confident and deserving while you secretly feel like a fraud. Yet impostor syndrome is remarkably widespread, quietly experienced by a large share of capable people across every field. The polished, assured exteriors you compare yourself against often conceal the very same doubts. Simply learning how common impostor feelings are can bring real relief, dissolving the sense of being uniquely fraudulent and opening the door to speaking about it, which tends to loosen its hold considerably.
While impostor feelings may never vanish entirely, you can change your relationship with them. This involves recognising the pattern when it appears, naming it rather than believing it, and deliberately acknowledging your real accomplishments and the genuine ability behind them. It helps to talk about the feelings, since secrecy feeds them, and to accept that you can feel like an impostor and still be entirely competent. Treating the doubting voice as a familiar but unreliable narrator, rather than the truth, lets you act with confidence even when the old feeling lingers.
Your result reflects how strongly impostor feelings affect you. A higher score suggests impostor syndrome may be a significant presence, with persistent self-doubt despite real evidence of your competence, a common and very workable pattern. A lower score suggests you generally own your accomplishments and abilities. A moderate score indicates some impostor feelings that surface in certain situations. Wherever you fall, remember that impostor feelings are widespread among capable people and reflect a distortion in self-perception, not the truth about your ability, and their grip loosens as you name them and speak about them.