What a relationship compatibility test can actually tell you
Compatibility gets talked about as if it were a fixed trait, something two people either have or do not. Decades of research on couples tells a different story. Long term satisfaction is predicted far less by how similar two people look on paper, and far more by how they handle the everyday business of being together: how they speak to each other, how they recover after friction, and whether they still turn toward each other in small moments. In other words, compatibility is partly chemistry and mostly skills, and skills can be learned.
This test asks about ten moments every couple recognizes, then scores your relationship across four dimensions: communication, shared values, conflict repair, and closeness. One partner answers, honestly, about the relationship as it is right now, not as it was at its best or its worst.
Chemistry starts the story, skills decide how it goes
Attraction and spark matter, especially early on. But researchers who follow couples over many years keep landing on the same finding: what predicts a relationship thriving is not the absence of conflict. Happy couples argue too. What separates them is repair: the reach across the gap after a fight, the half joke that softens a tense evening, the simple "I did not say that well, can I try again?" Couples who repair quickly can survive big differences, while couples who never repair can be sunk by small ones.
That is why this quiz treats conflict repair as its own dimension instead of folding it into communication. Plenty of couples talk easily on good days and still stay stuck for a week after a bad one.
The four dimensions in plain language
- Communication: can you bring things up, and do you feel heard when you do?
- Shared values: do your pictures of the future point in the same direction, and does time apart work for both of you?
- Conflict repair: after friction, do you find your way back to each other, or does distance linger?
- Closeness: trust, affection, laughter, and what your gut says when nobody is asking.
How to read your score
Treat the number as a snapshot, not a sentence. Relationships move through seasons, and a score taken during a stressful month will look different from one taken on holiday. The most useful part of your result is usually not the headline percentage but the breakdown underneath it. The lowest bar is your best place to start, because improving one dimension tends to lift the others with it.
A few ways to put your result to work:
- Show the result to your partner and ask which answers they would have chosen differently. The gaps are where the interesting conversations live.
- Pick your weakest dimension and agree on one small, repeatable habit, like a ten minute check in twice a week or a rule that no argument ends without a repair attempt.
- If a conversation feels too big to open on your own, you can talk it through with an AI relationship coach that already knows your result and can help you find the words.
- Curious about other angles on your relationship? Explore more relationship tools and build a fuller picture.
One score, two perspectives
A compatibility score is most revealing when both partners take the test separately and compare notes. Where your answers agree, you are seeing the relationship clearly together. Where they differ, neither of you is wrong: you have found the exact spot where the relationship feels different from each side, and that is precisely where a calm, curious conversation pays off most. Retake the test every month or two, and the trend over time will tell you more than any single number ever could.