Best Depression Test - PHQ-9 Assessment

Take the best depression test online - Professional PHQ-9 screening tool with comprehensive result analysis

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How to interpret PHQ-9 scores responsibly

What this test does

The PHQ-9 is a widely used depression screening instrument. It is designed to estimate symptom burden over the previous two weeks, create a structured conversation baseline, and help monitor change over time. In primary care, university counseling, and digital health workflows, PHQ-9 is often used as the first triage layer before deeper clinical evaluation.

Your total score is not the whole story. A meaningful interpretation combines score range, item pattern, duration, daily functioning, and risk indicators. For example, two people with the same total score may need different next steps if one reports severe sleep disruption and suicidal ideation while the other reports mild concentration issues.

Score bands and practical next steps

  • 0-4: Minimal symptoms. Keep routines and monitor stress triggers.
  • 5-9: Mild symptoms. Consider sleep, activity, and social support adjustments.
  • 10-14: Moderate symptoms. Discuss with a licensed professional if persistent.
  • 15-19: Moderately severe. Clinical evaluation is strongly recommended.
  • 20-27: Severe. Seek prompt professional support and safety planning.

Clinical boundary and common misuse

This screening cannot diagnose depression on its own and should not be used to self-prescribe treatment, stop medication, or replace emergency care. Score fluctuations can be influenced by recent stressors, illness, sleep debt, and life events. For trend tracking, compare scores with similar context and at consistent intervals.

If item 9 (self-harm thoughts) is positive, do not wait for a repeat test. Immediate human support is the correct action even when the total score appears moderate.

Use guidelines

  • * Answer based on the last 14 days, not your best or worst day.
  • * Use this as a screening baseline, then validate with a clinician.
  • * Re-test at a consistent interval when monitoring treatment response.
  • * Escalate immediately if safety concerns appear.

Crisis resources (United States)

If you may harm yourself or others, call emergency services now.

  • * Call or text 988 (Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, 24/7)
  • * Chat online: 988lifeline.org
  • * Emergency: 911
  • * If you are outside the U.S., contact your local emergency hotline immediately.

Reference framework

  • * Kroenke K, Spitzer RL, Williams JBW. The PHQ-9: validity of a brief depression severity measure.
  • * APA Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Patients With Major Depressive Disorder.
  • * USPSTF recommendations on depression screening.

Editorial and safety note

This page provides educational screening guidance and cannot replace diagnosis, treatment planning, or crisis intervention by licensed professionals.

Author: Renge Editorial Team

Clinical reviewer: Advisory Reviewer (Behavioral Health)

Last updated: February 10, 2026