MBTI test alternative
If an MBTI test or 16Personalities-style quiz gives you a quick four-letter result, it can still leave the function pattern hidden.
TypeJung is not an official MBTI instrument. It is a free Jungian cognitive-functions test that shows all 8 scores and the dominant-inferior axis before any optional paid report.
Email yourself the assessment link and TYPEJUNG30 code. Start free, then decide after the result.
Four-letter type results can be helpful shorthand, but they often hide the evidence behind the label.
TypeJung starts with the function pattern: which function leads, which function supports it, and which opposite function tends to tighten under stress.
TypeJung is independent and educational. It does not claim to be an official MBTI instrument.
The practical difference is the order of value: you get the function-stack map first, then optional depth only after the result feels useful.
| Need | Label-first test | TypeJung |
|---|---|---|
| First output | A four-letter result | Function-stack map plus likely pattern |
| Stress evidence | Often generic | Dominant-inferior axis and pressure signals |
| Payment timing | Varies by tool | Free map before paid interpretation |
| Best use | Quick type hypothesis | Inspectable second opinion |
If your result keeps changing, treat the next test as evidence gathering, not a verdict. Take TypeJung, read the free map, and compare the axis against real stress patterns.
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. TypeJung is an independent Jungian cognitive-functions assessment for educational self-reflection, not an official MBTI instrument.
Yes. The core 42-question assessment and function-stack map are free. Insight and Mastery are optional one-time upgrades after you see the map.
Cognitive functions make the result easier to inspect. They show which processes lead, support, and create pressure under stress.