Imposter Syndrome Test
A confidential self-assessment informed by the Clance Impostor Phenomenon Scale, the original research instrument for measuring impostor feelings. You get an instant, plain-language result with the same interpretive ranges Dr. Clance defined, plus a professional PDF report you can keep or bring to a therapist.
What this test measures
How strong the impostor feeling really is
Impostor syndrome is the persistent sense of being a fraud despite real evidence of competence, paired with a fear of being found out. The Clance scale measures how much that pattern runs your inner life, across twenty statements drawn from her clinical work.
Clance-based items
Twenty statements informed by the Clance Impostor Phenomenon Scale, covering the fear of being exposed, dismissing success as luck, and discounting your own ability.
How often it is true
Each statement is rated from Not at all true to Very true, scored 1 to 5, for a total from 20 to 100. Higher means more frequent and intense impostor feelings.
Clance's own ranges
Your result uses the interpretive bands Dr. Clance defined: few, moderate, frequent, or intense impostor experiences, with language that normalizes rather than pathologizes.
| Feature | Typical free quiz | Psychology.com |
|---|---|---|
| Based on the Clance scale (CIPS) | Rarely | Yes, faithfully informed |
| Clance's published interpretive ranges | No | Yes, all four bands |
| Honest about being an adaptation | No | Yes, clearly labeled |
| Clinician-reviewed interpretation | Rarely | Yes, MD reviewed |
| Concrete next steps | No | Yes, evidence-based |
| 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 twenty statements are informed by the Clance Impostor Phenomenon Scale (Clance, 1985), the original self-report measure of impostor feelings developed by psychologist Pauline Rose Clance. Items are worded faithfully to the constructs she described: fear of evaluation and exposure, attributing success to luck, charm, or timing rather than ability, and discounting praise and accomplishment. Each item is answered from Not at all true to Very true, scored 1 to 5, giving a total from 20 to 100.
This screening is provided for education and self-reflection. It uses Clance's own interpretive ranges: a score of 40 or below suggests few impostor characteristics, 41 to 60 moderate, 61 to 80 frequent, and 81 to 100 intense impostor experiences. The higher the score, the more often and seriously impostor feelings interfere. Impostor feelings are a common experience, not a clinical diagnosis, so this is a starting point for reflection rather than a verdict.
- Clance PR. The Impostor Phenomenon: Overcoming the Fear That Haunts Your Success. Atlanta, GA: Peachtree Publishers; 1985.
- Clance PR, Imes SA. The imposter phenomenon in high achieving women: dynamics and therapeutic intervention. Psychother Theory Res Pract. 1978;15(3):241–247.
- Bravata DM, Watts SA, Keefer AL, et al. Prevalence, predictors, and treatment of impostor syndrome: a systematic review. J Gen Intern Med. 2020;35(4):1252–1275.
Common questions
Imposter Syndrome Test FAQ
What is imposter syndrome?
Imposter syndrome, or the impostor phenomenon, is the persistent feeling of being a fraud despite real evidence of your competence, along with a fear of being exposed. It is a common experience, especially among high achievers, and is not a formal mental-health diagnosis.
What score means I have impostor feelings?
Using Dr. Clance's ranges, a total of 40 or below suggests few impostor characteristics, 41 to 60 is moderate, 61 to 80 is frequent, and 81 to 100 is intense. Scores above 60 suggest impostor feelings are interfering meaningfully with your life.
Is this the official Clance scale?
This screener is faithfully informed by the Clance Impostor Phenomenon Scale and uses her published interpretive ranges. It is an educational adaptation for reflection, not a clinical assessment, and impostor feelings are not themselves a diagnosis.
Can impostor feelings be reduced?
Yes. Many people ease impostor feelings by naming the pattern, sharing it with trusted people, learning to internalize evidence of their competence, and sometimes working with a therapist on the underlying self-doubt and perfectionism.
Is the test really confidential?
Yes. It runs entirely in your browser. Your answers are never sent to a server, never stored, and never linked to you. No account is needed, and the optional PDF is generated on your own device.