20 questions based on the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale. Measure your overall sense of self-worth and confidence.
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Self-esteem is a stable sense of your own worth, and it can be strengthened. Here are five next steps.
Self-esteem grows through self-compassion, challenging harsh self-talk, and living by your values. Pick one step and start.
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Self-esteem is your overall sense of your own worth, how much you value, accept, and respect yourself, independent of any single achievement or setback. It quietly influences your relationships, decisions, resilience, and willingness to pursue what you want. Healthy self-esteem is not arrogance but a stable, grounded sense that you are fundamentally okay as you are. This free self-esteem test helps you see where you stand, and the steps below offer practical ways to strengthen it.
Low self-esteem is sustained by a stream of harsh, often inaccurate self-judgements that you rarely question. Begin by noticing these critical thoughts and treating them as opinions rather than facts. Ask whether you would judge a friend so severely, and look for the evidence the criticism ignores. Challenging these distortions, rather than accepting them automatically, gradually loosens their grip on how you see yourself.
Much low self-esteem comes from tying your worth to performance, so that any failure feels like proof of inadequacy. Work to separate your fundamental value as a person from your achievements and outcomes. You are worthy of respect simply as a human being, not only when you succeed. Practising this separation makes your self-esteem far more stable, since it no longer rises and falls with every result.
Self-compassion, treating yourself with the same kindness you would offer a good friend, is one of the most reliable ways to build healthy self-esteem. When you struggle or fall short, respond with understanding rather than contempt. This does not mean making excuses; it means meeting your difficulties with warmth, which paradoxically supports growth far better than harsh self-criticism, which tends to erode confidence and motivation.
Self-respect grows when you live in accordance with your own values. Each time you act with integrity, keep a commitment to yourself, or do something you believe is right, you build quiet evidence that you are someone worthy of respect. Conversely, repeatedly betraying your values erodes self-esteem. Aligning your actions with what genuinely matters to you is a powerful and often overlooked way to strengthen your sense of worth.
People with low self-esteem often deflect compliments, dismiss kindness, and struggle to believe they deserve good things. Practise simply receiving positive feedback and care without batting it away. Letting in others' appreciation, rather than reflexively rejecting it, slowly corrects an unfairly negative self-image. Allowing yourself to be valued by others is part of learning to value yourself.
Your result reflects your current sense of self-worth. A higher score suggests stable, grounded self-esteem that does not depend heavily on external approval, a strong foundation for wellbeing. A lower score suggests your self-worth may be fragile or conditional right now, often a result of harsh self-judgement rather than reality, and it can be strengthened with the steps above. A moderate score indicates generally healthy self-esteem that dips in certain areas. Wherever you fall, self-esteem can grow through self-compassion, challenging harsh self-talk, and living by your values.