Antisocial Personality Disorder Test
Take a private 40-question ASPD self-check to explore patterns related to empathy, impulsivity, rule boundaries, accountability, and conflict. This page is educational only and does not diagnose antisocial personality disorder.
What is an antisocial personality disorder test?
An online antisocial personality disorder test is a self-reflection questionnaire about traits sometimes associated with ASPD, including low concern for others, impulsive decisions, repeated rule problems, deceptive behavior, lack of remorse, and aggressive conflict patterns. It can help you notice patterns, but it cannot confirm or rule out ASPD.
ASPD is a mental health diagnosis. Diagnosis is not based on one quiz score. Clinicians consider age, long-term behavior, impairment, developmental history, possible conduct problems before adulthood, substance use, trauma, mood disorders, and other explanations.
What this ASPD self-check measures
The test groups your answers into five practical areas. These are not diagnostic criteria. They are educational categories that make your result easier to understand.
Empathy and remorse
How strongly you register other people’s feelings, needs, and harm after conflict.
Impulsivity
How often immediate reward overrides planning, patience, and consequences.
Rules and responsibility
How you relate to commitments, social rules, authority, and obligations.
Honesty and influence
How direct, transparent, or strategic you tend to be when you want something.
Conflict and aggression
How you handle anger, power, disagreement, pressure, and accountability.
Take the Antisocial Personality Disorder Test
Answer honestly based on your usual behavior across time, not just a recent stressful week. You can go back, skip, and change answers before seeing your result.
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Choose the answer that fits you best.
Your result
How to read your result
Low or mild scores
Low scores usually mean you report strong concern for others, better impulse control, more respect for obligations, and more discomfort when you hurt someone. A low score does not mean you never act selfishly. It simply means you did not strongly endorse ASPD-related traits on this quiz.
Elevated scores
Elevated scores mean you endorsed more patterns linked with emotional distance, impulsivity, rule friction, manipulation, or aggressive conflict. This is not a diagnosis, but it may be worth reflecting on whether these patterns are affecting relationships, work, safety, or trust.
Use the result as a mirror, not a label. If a pattern feels accurate and causes problems, the useful question is not “what am I?” but “what do I want to understand, repair, or change?”
Related personality and relationship tests
These internal tests can help users explore adjacent patterns without turning one quiz into a diagnosis.
Antisocial personality disorder test FAQ
Can this test diagnose antisocial personality disorder?
No. This test is for education and self-reflection only. ASPD can only be diagnosed by a qualified mental health professional through a full evaluation.
What does a high score mean?
A high score means you endorsed more statements related to emotional detachment, impulsivity, rule problems, manipulation, or aggressive conflict. It does not prove you have ASPD.
Is ASPD the same as being antisocial or introverted?
No. In everyday language, antisocial can mean avoiding social events. Clinically, antisocial personality disorder refers to a persistent pattern involving disregard for others’ rights and serious relationship or responsibility problems.
Can someone change these patterns?
People can learn better impulse control, accountability, emotion recognition, and relationship repair skills. If the patterns are serious or harmful, professional support is the best next step.
Should I use this test on someone else?
No. This test is designed for self-report. You cannot accurately diagnose another person from a quiz, and labeling someone can make conflicts worse.
Research and clinical references
This page uses plain-language education from reputable health references. The test itself is not a diagnostic instrument.
