Do You Fall In Love Too Easily?

Discover if your romantic threshold is lower than average, potentially drawing you toward unstable partnerships. Answer 11 questions honestly. Takes 2 minutes!

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About This Test

What It Measures

This test measures emotional promiscuity—the tendency to fall in love quickly, frequently, and with multiple people. It evaluates whether you rush into relationships, develop romantic feelings easily, experience immediate sparks, plan futures with people you just met, or feel attracted to multiple people simultaneously. High emotional promiscuity is linked to anxious attachment, fear of being alone, confusing infatuation with genuine compatibility, and seeking the dopamine rush of new romance rather than building sustainable relationships. Research shows it predicts relationship instability, frequent heartbreak, and difficulty maintaining long-term partnerships.

How It Works

You'll respond to 11 statements about your romantic patterns—how frequently you fall in love, how quickly feelings develop, whether you rush into relationships, whether you're captivated by the initial rush, and whether you've loved or felt attracted to multiple people simultaneously. Your score places you on a spectrum from slow burner (love develops gradually over time) to serial romantic (falling quickly and often). Based on research into attachment styles, infatuation versus genuine compatibility, and romantic relationship stability predictors.

When to Use This Test

Take this test if you've had many intense but short relationships, if you constantly feel 'in love' with someone new, if friends tell you you're moving too fast, if you struggle to distinguish infatuation from lasting compatibility, or if you're in therapy for relationship patterns. High scores suggest examining what emotional need this pattern serves—are you afraid of being alone? Addicted to the dopamine rush? Avoiding genuine intimacy by constantly chasing new romance? Understanding the pattern is the first step toward building more stable, fulfilling relationships.