Discover Your Enneagram Type
A reflection-based questionnaire that explores possible motivations, fears, and recurring patterns behind your behavior. Treat the result as a hypothesis to examine, not a diagnosis or fixed identity.
Meet the 9 Personalities
Each type describes a possible motivational pattern and recurring fear. Use the language to notice tendencies, not to reduce yourself or someone else to a label.
The Reformer
Principled, purposeful, self-controlled. Driven by the need to be good and right.
The Helper
Generous, people-pleasing, possessive. Driven by the need to be loved and needed.
The Achiever
Adaptive, excelling, image-conscious. Driven by the need to be valuable and successful.
The Individualist
Expressive, dramatic, temperamental. Driven by the need to be unique and authentic.
The Investigator
Perceptive, innovative, secretive. Driven by the need to understand and be competent.
The Loyalist
Engaging, responsible, anxious. Driven by the need for security and support.
The Enthusiast
Spontaneous, versatile, scattered. Driven by the need to be happy and avoid pain.
The Challenger
Self-confident, decisive, confrontational. Driven by the need to be strong and in control.
The Peacemaker
Receptive, reassuring, complacent. Driven by the need for inner peace and harmony.
What Makes the Enneagram Different
Unlike trait-based systems, the Enneagram invites reflection on motivation — the possible reasons beneath a behavior. Two people can act similarly for different reasons, so the framework offers questions for exploring your "why."
The system also describes tendencies associated with stress and growth. It can be a useful vocabulary for reflection, but it is not a clinical assessment and should not replace professional support.
Enneagram and Relationships
Discussing Enneagram patterns may create a gentler vocabulary for conflict. Instead of assuming another person's motive, use a type description as an invitation to ask what they are actually feeling and needing.
Mazarion combines Enneagram, astrology, and attachment reflections to surface possible relationship patterns. These are conversation starters, not predictions or measures of relationship quality.
Frequently Asked
How long does the Enneagram test take?
The 45-question reflection usually takes about 5–8 minutes. Its result is a prompt for self-observation, and you may identify with more than one pattern.
What are the 9 Enneagram types?
The nine types are: Type 1 (Reformer), Type 2 (Helper), Type 3 (Achiever), Type 4 (Individualist), Type 5 (Investigator), Type 6 (Loyalist), Type 7 (Enthusiast), Type 8 (Challenger), and Type 9 (Peacemaker). Each has distinct core motivations and fears.
What is an Enneagram wing?
Your wing is one of the two types adjacent to your core type. For example, if you're a Type 4, your wing is either 4w3 or 4w5. Your wing adds a secondary flavor to your personality, creating unique subtypes.
Can my Enneagram result change?
Results can change with context, self-perception, and how you interpret the questions. Many people experience one pattern as relatively stable, but Mazarion does not treat a result as a permanent or clinical classification.