Codependency Test
A confidential self-assessment of codependency patterns: over-caretaking, basing your worth on others, struggling with boundaries, and losing track of your own needs. It is built on the work of Melody Beattie and codependency research, with a compassionate lens. Get an instant, plain-language result and a professional PDF report you can keep or bring to a therapist.
What this test measures
Four patterns of codependency, not a label
Codependency is not a flaw in your character. It is a learned set of patterns, often shaped early in life, where caring for others quietly crowds out caring for yourself. This assessment looks at four of those patterns together.
Caretaking patterns
How much you focus on rescuing, fixing, or over-helping others, often at your own expense and beyond what is healthy.
Self-worth & boundaries
Whether your sense of worth depends on others' approval, and how hard it is to set limits, say no, or tolerate someone being upset with you.
Your own needs
How often your needs, feelings, and goals get pushed aside, lost, or treated as less important than everyone else's.
| Feature | Typical free quiz | Psychology.com |
|---|---|---|
| Covers caretaking and boundaries | Partly | Yes, both |
| Measures self-worth tied to others | No | Yes |
| Includes denial of own needs | No | Yes |
| Compassionate, non-shaming framing | Often blaming | Yes |
| Clinician-reviewed interpretation | Rarely | Yes, MD reviewed |
| Downloadable PDF report | No | Yes, branded & shareable |
| Confidential (no data sent) | Often tracked | Runs in your browser |
How we built this test
Methodology & sources
The items in this test draw on widely used descriptions of codependency, including Melody Beattie's foundational work Codependent No More (1986), which popularized the concept, and on themes from codependency-assessment research such as the Spann-Fischer Codependency Scale, which measures focus on others, self-sacrifice, difficulty with boundaries, and suppression of one's own needs. The questions are written for readability and reflection rather than reproducing any single proprietary scale.
This is an educational screener, not a diagnostic tool. Codependency is not a formal diagnosis in the major manuals; it is a useful descriptive concept for a cluster of relationship patterns. Those patterns are learned, frequently in families where someone struggled with addiction, illness, or emotional unavailability, and they are very workable. The result is meant to encourage gentle self-reflection and to help you decide whether working with a therapist could help you build healthier, more balanced relationships.
- Beattie M. Codependent No More: How to Stop Controlling Others and Start Caring for Yourself. Center City, MN: Hazelden; 1986.
- Fischer JL, Spann L, Crawford D. Measuring codependency. Alcohol Treat Q. 1991;8(1):87–100.
- Marks ADG, Blore RL, Hine DW, Dear GE. Development and validation of a revised measure of codependency. Aust J Psychol. 2012;64(3):119–127.
- Bacon I, McKay E, Reynolds F, McIntyre A. The lived experience of codependency: an interpretative phenomenological analysis. Int J Ment Health Addict. 2020;18:754–771.
Common questions
Codependency Test FAQ
What is codependency?
Codependency describes a pattern where you become so focused on other people's needs, feelings, and approval that you lose touch with your own. It often shows up as over-caretaking, difficulty with boundaries, a sense of worth that depends on being needed, and putting yourself last. It is common in relationships affected by addiction, illness, or emotional unavailability.
Is codependency a mental-health diagnosis?
No. Codependency is not a formal diagnosis in the diagnostic manuals. It is a descriptive concept for a cluster of relationship patterns. That does not make it any less real or worth addressing; it simply means the goal is understanding and change rather than a label.
Where does codependency come from?
It is usually learned, often early in life. Many people develop these patterns growing up in homes where a caregiver struggled with addiction, mental illness, or emotional unavailability, and where being helpful or invisible felt safest. Because it is learned, it can also be unlearned.
Is this test a diagnosis?
No. It is an educational screening for self-reflection only. It is informed by established codependency frameworks but cannot diagnose anything. Only a licensed professional can explore these patterns with you in depth.
Can codependency change?
Yes, very much so. With awareness, support, and practice, people learn to set boundaries, reconnect with their own needs, and build relationships that feel mutual rather than one-sided. Therapy and support groups both have a strong track record here.