An honest self-check. Not a diagnosis — a mirror.
Answer each question honestly and QuizOracle scores your result instantly in your browser — nothing is stored and no sign-up is needed.
How Many Autistic Traits Do You Show? scores your answers and places you on the scale below. Every band is described in full so you know exactly what your result means — and you can retake the test any time to see how it shifts.
You show a striking number of traits that are associated with autistic ways of being. This isn't a diagnosis — but it's enough that a professional assessment could bring real clarity.
Clarity is rarely a threat; for many people it's a relief. Recognizing yourself here isn't a flaw — it's information you can do something with.
Some of this fits you, some doesn't. Traits like these also appear with high sensitivity, introversion, or simply as part of a personality.
If the topic stays on your mind, a conversation with a professional can help you place it.
Only a few of these traits apply to you. You might recognize one or two, but they don't strongly shape how you move through the world.
This self-check looks at everyday experiences that are often linked to autistic ways of processing the world — how much energy conversations cost you, how you handle eye contact and small talk, how sensitive you are to sound, light and texture, how deeply you focus on the things that grip you, and how much you rely on routine and order. None of these traits belongs only to autistic people. They appear, in different combinations and to different degrees, across the whole population.
That is exactly why the result is a mirror and not a diagnosis. Recognising many of these traits in yourself does not mean you are autistic, and recognising only a few does not rule it out — autism is a spectrum that shows up very differently from one person to the next, and in adults it is often quietly missed for years. A short quiz can point you toward a question worth asking; only a qualified professional can actually answer it.
So treat a high score as an invitation to reflect, not a label to wear. For a lot of people, putting language to experiences they always felt but never named brings relief rather than worry — it turns self-blame into understanding, and understanding into a life built to fit how your mind actually works. If the topic stays with you after this test, that curiosity is worth honouring: a conversation with your doctor or a specialist is the real next step. Nothing here replaces a proper assessment, and reaching for clarity is never something to be embarrassed about.