Are YOU smart enough to join Mensa? Take our interactive quiz to see if you could join the cleverest brains in the world

  • Wolverhampton-based Mensa has created an exclusive test for MailOnline
  • It tells you if you might be smart enough to join the elite society 
  • The puzzles stimulate memory, concentration, agility and perception
  • Mensa welcomes anyone who is in the top two per cent in the country 

More than 121,000 people worldwide are members of Mensa, an elite society that boasts some of the smartest brains on the planet.

And you too could join this group if you can prove you’re in the top two per cent of the population in a supervised test.

To find out if you’ve got what it takes, MailOnline has helped develop an exclusive Mensa test to see if you might have the level of intelligence needed to mingle smartest.

The Mensa puzzles are designed to stimulate memory, concentration, agility, perception and reasoning, which all contribute to a high IQ.

Take the quiz below 

Adam Kirby, pictured, became the youngest person ever to join Mensa in June 2013 at the age of just two and a half. While most toddlers are busy learning to walk and scribbling on walls, child prodigy Adam Kirby enjoys reading Shakespeare, learning Japanese, Spanish and French, and even potty-trained himself

Adam Kirby, pictured, became the youngest person ever to join Mensa in June 2013 at the age of just two and a half. While most toddlers are busy learning to walk and scribbling on walls, child prodigy Adam Kirby enjoys reading Shakespeare, learning Japanese, Spanish and French, and even potty-trained himself

Intelligence Quotient, or IQ, is a a measure of someone’s intelligence - usually measuring in problem-solving tests - compared to others of their age.

In an IQ test, the average score is taken to be 100, and a score below this means your intelligence is below average.

WHAT IS MENSA?

Mensa was formed by Australian barrister Roland Berrill and scientist and lawyer Dr Lance Ware in Oxford in 1946.

It has members across all demographics. The youngest member joined aged two and a half, and the oldest was 103.

Mensa says it is ‘a society for like-minded people’ with the following aims:

- To identify and foster human intelligence for the benefit of humanity.

- To encourage research in the nature, characteristics, and uses of intelligence.

- To provide a stimulating intellectual and social environment for its members.  

This mini quiz from Mensa is based on the type of questions you could face if you sat a supervised IQ test. 

A top two per cent score on an IQ test will qualify you to join Mensa - or you can provide evidence that you are already in the top two per cent of the population.

The tests are based on measuring someone’s IQ, although this quiz below is merely an indication of your IQ - and should not be used as proof of IQ.

IQ is a measure of intelligence, usually referring to a person’s mental agility, and it should not be confused with knowledge, wisdom or memory.

Standardised IQ exams look to test you in certain areas such as verbal and numerical.

Daily brain training exercises like this can help improve mental agility, and keep the brain working at speed.

A score of eight or above out of ten in the quiz below is an indicator that you could be smart enough to join Mensa.

To take the quiz below, you will need to open it on a browser on a laptop or PC. It does not work on a mobile phone.

HAVE YOU GOT WHAT IT TAKES? 

HOW WELL DID YOU SCORE? 

4 out of 10 - Keep practising

5 out of 10 - Average

6 out of 10 - Good

7 out of 10 - Very good

8 or more out of 10 - Potential Mensa level

 

The answers to the quiz are below. 

Mensa (logo shown) was formed by Australian barrister Roland Berrill and scientist and lawyer Dr Lance Ware in Oxford in 1946. It has members across all demographics. The youngest member joined aged two and a half, and the oldest was 103

Mensa (logo shown) was formed by Australian barrister Roland Berrill and scientist and lawyer Dr Lance Ware in Oxford in 1946. It has members across all demographics. The youngest member joined aged two and a half, and the oldest was 103

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