Measure your overall life satisfaction across key domains. Based on validated wellbeing research.
Life satisfaction is your overall, reflective sense of how well your life is going, a broader judgement than passing happiness and one that reflects how closely your life matches what you hoped it would be. This free life satisfaction quiz invites you to step back and take that bigger-picture view across the areas that matter most, and the steps below offer practical ways to nurture a more satisfying life where there is room to grow.
Daily life keeps us focused on immediate concerns, which makes it easy to lose sight of how things are going overall. Periodically stepping back to take the wide view, asking honestly how satisfied you are with your life as a whole, is itself a valuable practice. This bigger-picture reflection can reveal quiet truths that the busyness of everyday life obscures, surfacing both what is going well and what genuinely needs attention before it becomes urgent.
Not all areas of life carry equal weight for your satisfaction. Identify which domains matter most to you personally, since satisfaction in your most valued areas affects your overall sense of life more than satisfaction in those you care about less. Focusing your attention and energy on the domains that genuinely matter to you, rather than those others prioritise, is the most efficient route to a more satisfying life and prevents effort spent on the wrong things.
Once you know what matters most and where you feel least satisfied, focus on closing the gaps that count. Choose the area where improvement would most raise your overall satisfaction and take concrete steps toward it. Rather than scattering effort, concentrating on the few high-impact gaps tends to produce the greatest lift in how you feel about your life. Steady progress on what genuinely matters reliably outperforms broad but shallow change.
While life satisfaction is a big-picture judgement, it rests on the texture of ordinary days. Build habits that reliably support wellbeing, connection, meaningful activity, gratitude, and care for your body, into your routine. These daily practices accumulate into a more satisfying life over time. Because they compound, small consistent habits often shape your overall satisfaction more powerfully than occasional dramatic changes in your circumstances.
Life satisfaction naturally shifts with circumstances, life stages, and how well your daily life matches your evolving values. Revisit your sense of satisfaction periodically and adjust your priorities and habits accordingly. Treating it as something you actively tend, rather than a fixed verdict, keeps your life oriented toward what genuinely fulfils you as you and your circumstances change. Many people find that checking in this way helps them course-correct before dissatisfaction deepens.
Your result reflects your overall sense of how your life is going. A higher score suggests strong life satisfaction: your life broadly matches your values and hopes, a deep and stable form of wellbeing. A lower score suggests a gap between your current life and what would fulfil you, worth exploring with care and curiosity. A moderate score indicates general satisfaction with some unfinished areas. Wherever you fall, the steps above help you step back, identify what matters most, and take concrete action to build a more satisfying life over time.