Find out who your best friend really is. Create a quiz and see who knows you inside out!
You probably think you know who your best friend is. But do they actually know you? A best friend quiz puts that to the test. You answer 10 questions about yourself — things like your go-to comfort food, your secret talent, the place you want to visit most — and then you hand the quiz over to your friends. Their job is to guess what you picked. The person who gets the most answers right wins.
It sounds simple because it is. But the results tend to surprise people. The friend you’ve known since kindergarten might score lower than someone you met last year. Your sibling might bomb it completely. That’s what makes this whole thing worth doing — you stop assuming and start finding out.
Head to bestfriendquiz.app and you can have your quiz ready in under two minutes. The process is straightforward: you see a question, you tap the answer that fits you, and you move on. Ten questions, ten answers, done.
Once you finish, the site generates a unique link. That link is your quiz. Anyone who opens it will see the same 10 questions and try to guess what you chose. They enter their name, go through the questions, and get a score at the end. Meanwhile, you get a results page where everyone’s name and score show up in a ranked list.
There’s nothing to install, no account to create, and no email address to hand over. Your friends just need the link and a minute of their time.
The trick to a good best friend quiz isn’t picking impressive answers — it’s picking truthful ones. If you say your favorite hobby is reading classic literature when you actually spend your evenings watching reality TV, the quiz stops being a real test. Your friends will guess based on what they observe in real life, so your answers need to match reality.
That said, not every question needs to be dead serious. The best quizzes have a mix. A couple of lighthearted questions (“What’s my favorite snack?”), a few that require some actual knowledge (“What’s my biggest pet peeve?”), and one or two that only a close friend would get right (“What’s the one thing I’d change about myself?”).
The goal is a quiz that feels personal. When your friends go through it, they should recognize you in the questions — not some polished version of you.
There’s something satisfying about proving you know someone well. And there’s something equally fun about discovering the gaps — the things your friends assumed about you that turned out to be completely wrong.
Best friend quizzes tap into that. They give friend groups something concrete to compete over. Instead of vaguely saying “I know you so well,” you get an actual number. 90%. 70%. 40%. Those numbers spark reactions. High scorers celebrate. Low scorers demand a rematch or blame the questions. Either way, it gets people talking.
Beyond the competition, the quiz works as a conversation starter. After someone takes it, you end up discussing the answers. “You really think my dream vacation is the beach? I’ve told you a hundred times I want to go to Japan.” Those conversations wouldn’t happen without the quiz giving them a reason to.
A quiz nobody takes is a quiz that doesn’t work. Here’s how to actually get results:
Group chats are your best bet. Send the link where your friends already hang out. Add a challenge — “nobody’s beating 80% on this” — and watch people start competing. When someone posts their score, others jump in because nobody wants to be left out.
Stories work well too. Throw your quiz link on an Instagram or Snapchat story. A simple “think you know me?” with the link is enough. People are curious by nature, and a story disappears in 24 hours, so there’s urgency built in.
Direct messages hit different. Sending someone your quiz link personally feels more intentional than a broadcast. They’re more likely to actually open it, and the results feel more meaningful when someone took the time specifically because you asked them to.
Bio links are the slow burn. Put your quiz link in your TikTok or Instagram bio and let it collect responses over days. Not everyone checks bios, but the people who do tend to be genuinely interested.
Once your friends start finishing the quiz, your results page fills up. Each entry shows a name and a percentage score. The list is sorted from top to bottom, highest score first.
Pay attention to which questions tripped people up. If eight out of ten friends got your favorite color right but none of them knew your biggest fear, that says something about the kind of information you share openly versus what you keep private. It’s a small window into how you present yourself to the world.
Low scores don’t mean someone doesn’t care about you. Some questions are genuinely tricky, and people second-guess themselves on stuff they actually know. The quiz is meant to be fun, not a relationship audit.
You can make a new quiz anytime you feel like it. Swap out your answers, share a fresh link, and see if the results change. People’s knowledge of you grows over time, and running a new quiz every now and then is a good way to track that.