Sexuality Test With Free Results!

By Massimo Jenkins – May 11, 2025

couples kissing after taking the sexuality quiz
Table of Contents

Take Our Sexuality Test

Starting our sexuality quiz is as easy as clicking “Start Quiz” and answering all the questions intuitively. Click yourway to the end to receive your results immediately.

What Results To Expect

You will receive your results at the end of the sexuality test. They will be shown to you as a percentage and a visual chart. The higher the percentage the more you fit into that category (according to the test) and the lower the percentage the less likely it is you fit into that category.

What sexuality am I?

To help answer this question, you can take the sexuality quiz mentioned above, which offers two key benefits: it introduces you to questions you might not have previously considered, and it provides your results as a nuanced percentage rather than a simple binary label—giving you an additional resource on your journey to self-discovery.

Beyond quizzes, you can further explore your sexuality by reading detailed definitions of different orientations and seeing which ones resonate most with you, reflecting honestly on your past romantic, sexual, or emotional attractions, or imagining various scenarios and observing how your body and mind respond to them. If you feel unsure or overwhelmed, talking with a therapist experienced in sexuality and identity issues can also be immensely helpful.

What Sexualities We Test For

Our sexuality test will give you a score for 5 sexualities: straight, gay, bisexual, demisexual and asexual. Here is what they mean: 

Straight (Heterosexual):

A person who is primarily sexually and/or romantically attracted to people of the opposite gender. For example, a man attracted to women or a woman attracted to men. This is considered the most common orientation in many societies.

Gay (Homosexual):

Someone who is primarily attracted to people of the same gender. This term is often used to describe men who are attracted to other men, but it can be used more broadly as well. Lesbian is a more specific term used for women who are attracted to women.

Bisexual:

A person who experiences sexual and/or romantic attraction to more than one gender—often both men and women. This doesn’t necessarily mean attraction is equal; different people may lean more toward one gender than the other.

Demisexual:

Someone who only feels sexual attraction after forming a strong emotional bond with someone. Demisexuality is part of the asexual spectrum and can apply regardless of gender preferences.

Asexual:

A person who experiences little to no sexual attraction to anyone. This doesn’t mean they can’t have relationships or feel romantic love—it just means they don’t feel sexual desire in the same way others might.

What Sexualities We Do Not Test For

Our sexuality test used to include more sexualities such as pansexual but due to the results being unreliable we have decided to limit the number of sexualities we test for since this way we can guarantee a more accurate result. Here is a list of other sexualities and what they mean: 

Pansexual

A person who is sexually and/or romantically attracted to people regardless of their gender identity. Pansexuality is often described as being “gender-blind” in attraction—meaning the gender of the person does not play a role in the attraction. A pansexual person may be attracted to men, women, non-binary individuals, and others across the gender spectrum.

Omnisexual

Similar to pansexuality, but with a distinction: gender is recognized and may influence attraction. An omnisexual person can be attracted to all genders but might experience different kinds or levels of attraction depending on the person’s gender.

Queer

An umbrella term used to describe any sexual orientation or gender identity that falls outside of heterosexual and cisgender norms. Some people use “queer” because they find other labels too limiting, or because they see their sexuality as fluid. It can also be a political identity, rejecting rigid categories.

Polysexual

A person who is attracted to multiple genders, but not necessarily all. Unlike pansexuality (all genders) or bisexuality (two or more genders), polysexuality recognizes attraction to several genders while excluding others. For example, someone may be attracted to women and non-binary people but not men.

Skoliosexual

A person who is primarily attracted to non-binary, genderqueer, or otherwise gender-nonconforming individuals. The attraction is focused on people whose gender identity doesn’t fit within the traditional male/female binary.

Sapiosexual

A person who is sexually attracted to intelligence first and foremost. For sapiosexual individuals, a person’s intellect or capacity for deep conversation is the most important or even exclusive factor in attraction—gender and appearance are secondary.

Graysexual (Gray-Asexual)

This describes people who fall between asexuality and sexuality. They rarely experience sexual attraction, or only under very specific circumstances. A graysexual person might only occasionally feel sexual desire, and even then it may not be strong or consistent.

Lithsexual (Akiosexual)

A person who can feel sexual attraction, but does not desire reciprocation or sexual engagement. Lithsexual individuals may enjoy the idea of attraction or crushes, but lose interest if it’s mutual or turns into a relationship.

Reciprosexual

Someone who experiences sexual attraction only after knowing someone is attracted to them first. Without that initial interest from the other person, they may not feel attraction at all.

Fraysexual

A person who feels sexual attraction toward people they don’t know well, but that attraction fades once an emotional bond forms. This is sometimes described as the inverse of demisexuality.

Androsexual

A person who is sexually attracted to masculinity or masculine-presenting individuals. This attraction is regardless of the gender identity of the person experiencing it. For example, someone might identify as androsexual if they are attracted to men, masculine non-binary people, or anyone with masculine traits.

Gynosexual

Describes someone who is sexually attracted to femininity or feminine-presenting individuals. This identity focuses on the expression of femininity rather than the gender of the person themselves and can apply across the gender spectrum.

Autosexual

Someone who is primarily sexually attracted to themselves. Autosexual people may experience arousal from self-stimulation, erotic self-thoughts, or fantasies involving themselves rather than others. This doesn’t mean they’re narcissistic—it simply reflects their orientation toward their own body and mind.

Autoromantic

Similar to autosexual, but refers to romantic attraction toward oneself. An autoromantic person may fantasize about romantic gestures involving themselves or feel emotional fulfillment in self-love rather than in relationships with others.

Cupiosexual

A person who doesn’t experience sexual attraction but still desires to have sexual relationships or engage in sexual activity. Unlike asexual people who may have no interest in sex at all, cupiosexual individuals may actively seek sexual connection despite lacking internal attraction.

Quoisexual (Whatsexual)

Someone who finds the concept of sexual attraction confusing or doesn’t understand it in a way that fits existing labels. They may be uncertain if they feel sexual attraction at all, or if what they experience qualifies as such. It’s common among neurodivergent individuals.

Aegosexual (Autochorissexual)

This identity involves experiencing sexual arousal from fantasies or content without desiring involvement in the act. Aegosexual people may enjoy erotic media or have vivid sexual fantasies but feel no interest in actual sex, even with someone they’re attracted to.

Venusian

An alternative term for being attracted to femininity. It is gender-inclusive, often used by non-binary or gender-nonconforming people who are attracted to feminine energy or presentation. Unlike “gynosexual,” it emphasizes identity inclusivity and avoids gendered language.

Martian

A parallel to Venusian, used to describe attraction toward masculine traits or energy. It provides a gender-neutral way for people (especially outside the binary) to describe their attraction to masculinity without relying on male/female language.

Abrosexual

An orientation in which a person’s sexual attraction changes over time. This can include shifts in who they’re attracted to, how intense that attraction is, or whether they experience it at all. These changes may happen over days, months, or years, and may not follow any fixed pattern.

Reciproromantic

Someone who only develops romantic feelings for another person after knowing the other person is romantically interested in them first. Without that external cue, they may not feel romantic attraction at all.

Frayromantic

A person who feels romantic attraction at the beginning of knowing someone, but loses interest once emotional closeness develops. This is the romantic counterpart of fraysexuality, and can make traditional long-term relationships difficult unless both partners understand the pattern.

If you don’t resonate with the 5 sexualities we test for in our sexuality test I encourage you to read the definitions a couple of times to see if any of those resonate with you! 

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