MBTI mistype test
A mistype usually does not get solved by reading more type stereotypes. If two or three labels keep competing, the useful question is what function pattern is actually showing up.
TypeJung maps all 8 cognitive functions first, then shows a likely type pattern, dominant-inferior axis, and stress edge before any paid report.
Email yourself the assessment link and TYPEJUNG30 code. Start free, then decide after the result.
Many MBTI-style tests reduce a complex pattern into four letter choices. That can work for broad sorting, but it becomes unstable when your scores are close, your role changes, or your answers come from stress.
Mistypes also happen because nearby types can look similar from the outside. INFJ and INFP can both seem introspective and idealistic; INTJ and INTP can both seem analytical and private. The difference usually sits in function order.
A better mistype test compares the process behind the label. It should ask what leads your attention, what supports it, what becomes awkward under pressure, and whether the result holds together as a whole map.
| Evidence to inspect | Why it matters | TypeJung path |
|---|---|---|
| Dominant signal | The leading function should explain your most trusted mode of attention or judgment | The free map estimates the likely dominant function from scenario evidence |
| Support function | Many mistypes happen when the auxiliary is guessed from stereotype instead of pattern | The result compares the function stack instead of treating one score as the whole answer |
| Inferior edge | Stress often reveals the opposite pole of the pattern more clearly than normal behavior | TypeJung highlights the dominant-inferior axis and stress pressure |
| Answer consistency | A shaky result should be read as a hypothesis, not a verdict | The result includes a consistency signal so you know how firmly to read the map |
If you already have two likely labels in mind, compare the specific pair after taking the free assessment. These pages explain the most common function differences behind nearby type results.
Take the free TypeJung assessment first. Use the result to compare the function evidence behind your suspected type, then decide whether a deeper report is useful after the map earns your trust.
Take the free TypeJung assessment first. If the function-stack map feels useful, Insight is currently CA$7 with TYPEJUNG30 and Mastery is CA$20.30 with the same Stripe code.
No test should be treated as final proof. TypeJung gives a likely function-stack map and type pattern so you can inspect the evidence behind a possible mistype.
Look for repeated mismatch between the type label and your function pattern: what leads, what supports it, what gets pressured under stress, and which nearby type explains the whole map better.
Yes. The 42-question TypeJung assessment and core function-stack map are free. Paid reports are optional after you see the result.