100
Stanford-Binet IQ
Average

What an IQ of 100 means

Approximately the 50th percentile on the modern Stanford-Binet (SB5) and Wechsler scales.

50thpercentile
0.00standard deviations
1 in 2score this high or higher

An IQ of 100 sits in the average range on the Stanford-Binet and Wechsler scales. It is approximately the 50th percentile — meaning that 50% of the general population scores at or below this level, and 50% scores above.

The mean IQ is 100 by definition; the standard deviation is 15. So a score of 100 is 0.00 standard deviations from the mean. Most people you meet day to day score within 15 points of you in either direction — that is what “average range” actually feels like.

What it tells you, and what it does not

An IQ score is a snapshot of cognitive ability at the time of testing. It correlates with academic performance, job complexity, and certain measures of life outcomes — but the correlation is far weaker than the popular imagination suggests, especially above the average range. Roughly half of the variance in life outcomes is explained by factors entirely unrelated to IQ: persistence, conscientiousness, social ability, health, opportunity, and luck.

Alfred Binet, who built the first scale that became the Stanford-Binet, was clear about this. He treated the score as a question (“what does this person need in order to flourish?”) rather than a verdict. That framing has aged better than the alternative.

Frame of reference

The median person scores 100. Half the population scores above, half below.

Career and educational fit

The Stanford-Binet was originally built to inform educational decisions, and that remains its strongest use. A score of 100 is consistent with the median of every profession; skilled labour; small-business owners; supervisors.

None of these are deterministic. People with the score described above out-perform expectations regularly, and people with much higher scores under-perform regularly. The score describes the kind of cognitive demand a person handles comfortably — not who they will become.

The same total score, very different profiles

An IQ of 100 is a summary number. The five-factor profile is what it actually means.

Two people who both score 100 on the Full-Scale IQ can have completely different cognitive profiles. One might be at 115 on Innate Intelligence and 85 on Working Memory. The other might be the opposite. The summary score is identical. The lived experience of having that mind is not.

This is the part of the modern Stanford-Binet that the old single-number IQ obscured, and the part that our online assessment reports back to you alongside the total.

Can the score change?

Yes, in some directions and within some bounds. Working memory and processing speed move with sleep, stress, and physical health. Knowledge moves steadily with reading and exposure. Visual-spatial reasoning improves with practice on tasks that demand it. Innate Intelligence is the most stable factor in adulthood, and even Innate Intelligence shows real movement over years of cognitively demanding work.

People who re-test on a different day, or after a period of meaningful change in their lives, often see their score shift by 5 to 15 points. The Stanford-Binet itself permits re-testing within six months without serious practice-effect concerns.

Curious where you score, and what your factor profile looks like?

Take the Stanford-Binet Online35 to 45 minutes · Full-Scale IQ + five factor indices · From $49

Read more: about Alfred Binet · the five factors explained · online vs. clinical Stanford-Binet