20 questions measuring narcissistic traits based on the NPI scale. Understand your level of self-focus, entitlement and need for admiration.
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Narcissism exists on a spectrum, and a degree of healthy self-regard is normal and even beneficial. We all have an ego and a wish to be valued. This reflection explores narcissistic traits, such as grandiosity, a strong need for admiration, and a focus on oneself, and where you might fall on the continuum from healthy confidence to more pronounced patterns. It is important to hold this lightly: having some of these traits is entirely normal and not the same as a clinical condition. The aim is gentle self-awareness, not a label.
A certain amount of self-focus and self-belief is not only normal but valuable. Healthy self-regard lets you pursue goals, withstand criticism, advocate for yourself, and enjoy recognition for genuine accomplishments. The capacity to value yourself is part of a stable, confident life. Narcissistic traits become a concern only when they are pronounced and rigid, when the need for admiration is insatiable, when others' feelings are consistently disregarded, or when self-image cannot tolerate any challenge. Distinguishing healthy confidence from problematic self-absorption is the useful work this kind of reflection invites.
Looking honestly at your own self-focused tendencies, with curiosity rather than judgement, can actually deepen empathy and growth. We all have moments of self-absorption, defensiveness, or craving recognition, and noticing them is a sign of maturity, not a mark against you. This kind of self-awareness is the opposite of the rigidity that characterises problematic narcissism, which often involves an inability to self-reflect at all. Approaching the topic with openness, rather than anxiously trying to prove you are not narcissistic, is itself a healthy and revealing stance.
A key dimension that distinguishes healthy self-regard from problematic narcissism is empathy, the capacity to genuinely consider and care about others' feelings and perspectives. Confidence paired with empathy supports rich, mutual relationships; self-focus without empathy tends to strain them. Reflecting on how readily you consider others' experiences, alongside your own, offers a more meaningful window into these patterns than any single trait. Cultivating empathy and consideration is also one of the most constructive responses to noticing that your attention runs heavily toward yourself.
Whatever this reflection surfaces, hold it with curiosity rather than alarm. This is a self-reflection tool, not a diagnostic instrument; narcissistic personality disorder is a clinical diagnosis that only a qualified professional can make. A higher score is an invitation to reflect on your relationship with admiration, self-image, and empathy, not a verdict on your character. Self-awareness, the very thing this kind of reflection encourages, is a sign of growth. If you are genuinely concerned about these patterns or how they affect your relationships, a professional can offer guidance and perspective.
Your result reflects where you may fall on the narcissism spectrum. A lower score suggests you tend to be other-focused and modest. A moderate score reflects the healthy mix of self-regard most people have. A higher score suggests more pronounced self-focused traits, worth reflecting on with curiosity, though only a qualified professional can assess whether traits rise to a clinical level. This test cannot diagnose anything; take it as an invitation to reflect on admiration, self-image, and empathy, with self-awareness itself being a sign of growth.