Both tests claim to reveal who you are. But the similarities end at the acronym. Here's a clear breakdown.
You've probably taken an MBTI test — or at least heard someone proudly declare they're an INTJ. Now there's SBTI. Are they the same thing with different branding?
Not quite.
The core difference: binary vs. spectrum
MBTI works by sorting you into one of two camps per dimension: Introvert *or* Extrovert, Thinking *or* Feeling. Stack four of those binaries together and you get one of 16 types. Clean, simple, shareable on dating profiles.
SBTI doesn't do binaries. Each of its 15 dimensions is rated on a Low–Mid–High spectrum. That means your result captures nuance — you might be *somewhat* avoidant in one dimension while being all-in on another. That's closer to how people actually work.
Different questions, different targets
MBTI was developed in the 1940s based on Jungian psychology. It emphasizes cognitive functions and personality preferences in professional and social contexts.
SBTI was built from the ground up by internet communities observing a different kind of behavior — how people actually act when texting at 2am, how they respond to rejection, what their vibe is on a bad day. It's less concerned with cognitive archetypes, more interested in behavioral fingerprints.
27 types vs. 16
SBTI has 27 personality types — 25 standard, plus 2 special unlocks (DRUNK and HHHH). The extra range isn't padding; it's the system's way of capturing personalities that MBTI-style binaries tend to flatten.
Neither is "better"
MBTI has decades of research, organizational adoption, and refinement behind it. SBTI has cultural relevance, behavioral specificity, and the ability to tell you you're a MALO without making it feel like a diagnosis.
Use them for different things. MBTI for understanding your professional and reasoning tendencies. SBTI for a sharp, sometimes uncomfortably accurate look at how you actually operate.
Ready to find out yours?