Where do you stand?
Forty-six statements. Three axes. One honest picture of your politics, plotted on a compass you can share.
How it works
You'll read one statement at a time and answer on a five-point scale, from strongly agree to strongly disagree. Each answer nudges one of three scores. When you're done, your position lands on the compass: the classic economic and civil grid, plus a third societal axis shown as its own scale.
Every score runs from −10 to +10. Your result is encoded in the results page URL, so sharing your compass is just sharing a link — and you can always find it again in your browser history.
The economic axis. How should wealth and production be organized — collective provision on the left, market freedom on the right?
The civil axis. How much authority should the state hold over individual life — from minimal government to strong central power?
The societal axis. Should social norms change or hold — personal autonomy and pluralism, or tradition and continuity?
Privacy
There is nothing to disclose because nothing is collected. No analytics, no cookies, no accounts, no third-party requests. Your answers are scored entirely in your browser, and the only place your result exists is the URL of your results page — which is yours to share or not.
Credits
Compass is a modernized fork of SapplyValues: the statements come from the Sapply political compass test, and the one-statement-per-screen flow descends from 8values. The code has been rewritten from scratch — no frameworks, no trackers — and remains MIT licensed. License.