Depression Test

Screening Test for Depression

A quick, clinically-based check-in to understand your depression symptoms and what they might mean for you right now.

About 2 minutes · 13 quick questions · Instant results

Disclaimer

This test is not a diagnostic tool. It's designed as a screening and educational tool, not a substitute for medical advice. If symptoms persist, worsen, or you feel unsafe, contact a qualified professional, your local emergency number, or a mental health helpline. You can call 988 in the US and Canada, and 111 or 116 123 in the UK.

Key Takeaways

Takes about 2 minutes, just 13 quick questions

Looks at how often depression symptoms happened in the last two weeks

Uses the same DSM-5 criteria a doctor or therapist would use for screening

Gives you a score showing if symptoms are mild, moderate, or severe

Asks about anxiety and worry too since they often go together

Shows you patterns in how you're feeling (not an official diagnosis)

Helpful to retake every few weeks to see if things are changing

Assessment Block

  1. 1Answer 13 Questions
    Pick how often each symptom's been happening lately, from "not at all" to "nearly every day," based on what you've been experiencing. 9 of the questions are the screening measure with 4 being personalised to you to help us determine your results.
  2. 2Get Your Results
    When you have answered all 14 questions and submitted your email address your test score will be displayed. There will also be an indication of where your result sits on the symptom severity scale. This scale ranges from no symptoms present right the way through to severe symptoms.
  3. 3Know Your Next Steps
    You will receive specific suggestions based on your score - whether that's self-care tips, talking to a doctor, or in some cases being encouraged to get help right away.

FAQs

Reviewed by

Reviewer's statement

This PHQ-9–based screen maps common depressive symptoms over the past two weeks. It is a well-validated screening aid—not a diagnosis. Higher scores warrant a structured clinical assessment; mild scores may still benefit from psychoeducation, sleep, activity, and follow-up if symptoms persist or worsen.

Written by

Nicole LaMarco

Last updated

References and research

5 sources
  • Depression

    NIMH health publication

    View source
  • The PHQ-9: validity of a brief depression severity measure

    Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2001

    View source
  • The PHQ-9: acceptability, feasibility and construct validity in British general practice

    British Journal of General Practice, 2012

    View source
  • Psychometric properties of the PHQ-9 depression scale

    Europe’s Journal of Psychology, 2016

    View source
  • Accuracy of the PHQ-9 for screening to detect major depression

    Medical Journal of Australia, 2013

    View source

PHQ-9 is adapted from PRIME MD TODAY, developed by Drs Spitzer, Williams, Kroenke and colleagues, with an educational grant from Pfizer Inc. Use of the PHQ-9 may only be made in accordance with the Terms of Use available at www.pfizer.com. Copyright © 1999 Pfizer Inc. All rights reserved. PRIME MD TODAY is a trademark of Pfizer Inc.