The 5 Biggest Misconceptions About INFJs

INFJs are one of the most talked-about and written about personality types on the internet. Regarded as the rarest personality type, surprisingly they seem to have more articles dedicated to them than do any of the other types.

INFJs are supposed to make up a mere 2.3% of the population, but if you run a survey in most groups, a surprising number people there will have been typed as INFJ.  It gets even more confusing when you read articles about INFJs. If you look through a variety of online articles about INFJs, you’ll see that they are basically a combination of every other personality type! I myself mistyped as an INFJ for many years. Why does this happen so much? I had a sneaking suspicion as to why, but I decided to experiment.

I asked an ESTJ, two ESFJs, two ISFJs, an INFP, two ISFPs, and two ENTPs to take two popular free online tests. I didn’t tell them why I wanted them to do this, just that I wanted to see if they got the same result as they did through the official MBTI®. They all got an INFJ result, except for one of the ENTPs who got an ENFP result. These slapped together online indicators are creating an abundance of mistyped people who are then writing about the INFJ  type from their own perspective (which may indeed be the perspective of another personality type). As a result, many misconceptions abound about INFJs and I’m hoping today’s article can help to clear some of them up.

Not sure what your personality type is? Take our new personality questionnaire here. Or you can take the official MBTI® here.

Estimated reading time: 9 minutes

Misconception #1 – INFJs are Extremely Sensitive and Emotionally Intense

One thing that seems to be largely ignored in the personality community is that INFJs are intuitives first and feelers second. For the INFJ, the air they live and breathe is intuition. Understanding background processes, deciphering future implications, or reflecting on patterns and possibilities are things that they naturally gravitate towards. INFJs can certainly spend time dwelling on their own emotions and they can be sensitive, but it’s more frequent among IxFP personality types. INFJs use a mental process called Extraverted Feeling, and this function is more concerned with analyzing outer emotions than inner ones. As a result, INFJs may struggle when trying to sift through their own emotions.

Blogger Heidi Priebe describes it well when she says, “Because so many IxFP types misidentify as INFJs, INFJs often develop a reputation for being incredibly emotional dreamers – when in reality, they’re much more intellectual and discerning than they are emotional and imaginative.” See more of Heidi’s article here.

Can INFJs be emotional and sensitive? Yes. All types can be, but it’s generally not their main focus.

Sources: Psychological Types (The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Vol. 6) (Bollingen Series XX)
My True Type: Clarifying Your Personality Type, Preferences & Functions
How Mistypes Have Warped the Descriptions of Each MBTI Type

Types who are more emotionally in-tune with themselves: INFPs and ISFPs

Misconception #2 – INFJs are Extremely Detail-Oriented

I see a lot of INFJ memes and articles that talk about how they are so detail conscious. They “see everything” apparently. I’ve heard people talk about how INFJs have to have their houses neatly in order and they notice every little thing that is out of place.

I have to respectfully disagree.

INFJs are usually very unaware of the concrete details of their environment. Because INFJs have inferior sensing they usually gloss over details unless they pertain to people or the big picture. In general the details of life aren’t what interest INFJs as much as meanings and possibilities. INFJs tend to take in an overall impression of the atmosphere around them, but can be very blind to the details of their environment.

“Dealing with details, especially in an unfamiliar environment, can trigger inferior Extraverted Sensing (Se) in Introverted Intuitive types. In fact, these types frequently mention that feeling overwhelmed by details often provokes characteristic inferior function reactions.
Naomi Quenk, Was That Really Me?: How Everyday Stress Brings Out Our Hidden Personality

Sources:
The MBTI® Manual – A Guide to the Development and Use of the Myers-Briggs Type Indciator® Instrument
Was That Really Me?: How Everyday Stress Brings Out Our Hidden Personality

Types who are more detail-conscious: ISFJs, ESFJs, ISFPs

Misconception #3 – INFJs are Ambiverts

Because INFJs use Extraverted Feeling as their auxiliary function, they often get classified as ambiverts more than introverts. In social settings they can seem warm and gregarious. This is partially because they crave harmonious environments and value tact and overall good feelings. Awkward silences can make them feel like the harmony has been disrupted and they may appear more talkative than usual.

But INFJs are indeed true introverts.

Carl Jung himself said of INJs, “As their main activity is directed inwards, nothing is outwardly visible but reserve, secretiveness…uncertainty, and an apparent groundless embarrassment…When anything does come to the surface, it is generally an indirect manifestation of the inferior and relatively unconscious functions…Accordingly they are mostly underestimated, or at least misunderstood.”

“They (INFJs) prefer time away from external stimulation and mundane details in order to access their rich internal process.”
Dario Nardi

While auxiliary feeling does allow INFJs to engage socially with a certain adaptability and awareness, they definitely need a lot of alone time so they can allow their Intuition to process and synthesize the information they’ve picked up throughout the day.

Sources: Psychological Types (The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Vol. 6) (Bollingen Series XX)
Gifts Differing: Understanding Personality Type

Misconception #4 – INFJs Are Psychic

INFJs are masters of pattern-recognition and can easily be misconstrued as having some kind of “magical” foresight. The truth is much more technical.

INFJs gather copious amounts of information via their inferior function, Extraverted Sensation (or “Se” for short). Se is highly aware of concrete details and activity going on in the environment.  However, unlike ESxPs who are Se-dominant, INJs don’t instantly react to or identify this information. Instead, they collect all this sensory data in a jumble in their mind. Their intuition works to synthesize this information, along with existing subconscious information, as if it’s assembling a puzzle or finding a way through a maze to a hidden insight. The INFJ then gets an epiphany or revelation about what is happening and how certain events may unfold. They can easily sense “the brewing storm”, but it’s because they are constantly running this intuitive process in their mind, piecing together clues.

“Once finished, Ni generates an impression that seems to come out of “nowhere.” But the fact is that the intuition did not come out of nowhere, but from a synthesis of sensory data gathered from the immediate environment combined with information from the INJ’s own psyche.”
– Dr. A.J. Drenth, Introverted Intuition

Sources: My True Type: Clarifying Your Personality Type, Preferences & Functions
Psychological Types (The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Vol. 6) (Bollingen Series XX)
Neuroscience of Personality: Brain Savvy Insights for All Types of People

Misconception #5 – INFJs Know You Better Than You Know Yourself

No….no, no, no, no, no. This is why people call INFJs “special snowflakes” and find articles about them annoying and superior sounding. INFJs are gifted at picking up on patterns in human behavior, and they might be able to tell you (if you ask) which steps could lead in different directions. This doesn’t mean they know your entire past, history, experiences, or what made you who you are. They may be able to understand your emotional state before you blatantly spell it out, but that doesn’t mean they’re all empaths. To say something as incredibly arrogant as “I know you better than you know yourself” is insulting and belittling and certainly not kind or intelligent.  INFJs, like anyone, can be duped or wrong.

Source: Common sense

The INFJ personality type is unique and wonderful in so many ways. But so are all fifteen other personality types. I hope this article has cleared up some of the misconceptions…what do you think? Let me know your thoughts in the comments!

Find out more about your personality type in our eBooks, Discovering You: Unlocking the Power of Personality Type or The INFJ – Understanding the Mystic. You can also connect with me via Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter!

INFJ Understanding the Mystic

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72 Comments

  1. This article is exactly why most people don’t appreciate the scientific value of MBTI and think people who do are dumb.

    Terrible understanding of…. Everything related, especially common sense.

  2. Love these articles by “INFJ’s” who are determined to convince other people they’ve mistyped when they’ve taken the same test themselves and are convinced they are the real deal.

  3. Love these comments by posters who are determined to convince other people that they can’t be sure of their own type when they’re not themselves and are convinced that others only type based on a simple test.

    1. I am an ENTJ. Thank you for commenting, I thought I had fixed all my older articles where I had spoken as an INFJ (I thought I was for many years). I was typed INFJ when I got my MBTI certification and then after many years realized it wasn’t resonating with me and spoke to some other experts and found out where the problems were. I’ve been careful not to write my content from an anecdotal perspective (“I’m this type, so this is how you must be” that kind of thing) and rather I write from what I’ve learned in my certifications and trainings. I hope it is still helpful!

  4. Thank you for writing this I agree I get misunderstood a lot. Especially the part about being detail oriented (I am not) and knowing people better than they know themselves. (I’M STILL TRYING TO FIGURE ME OUT!) I actually hate being an INFJ. So many people seem to romanticize it. I wish I could be almost any other type.

  5. I’ve been typed as an INFJ on several different online tests, and everything I’ve read about it so far resonates with me, but it sounds like mistyping is pretty common. I’ve taken the DiSC personality profile test a few times over the years too, and every time my S and C scores are neck and neck for dominance and my i and D scores are both nearly non-existent; would that be consistent with an INFJ? Your explanation of the way INFJs gather information in a jumble and form an impression rather than focusing on specifics REALLY resonated with me. I’m a financial analyst/portfolio manager, and I analyze a ton of data every day, but my memory is absolute garbage, so if someone asks me for details about anything, I get extremely anxious trying to discuss it without having the data right in front of me (I’ve always had what seems like an irrational fear of miscommunication). Your article has me wondering if perhaps it’s less of a memory defect than an inconvenient aspect of the way my mind processes information…

  6. I barely know I have intuition until it’s out. I have had rare psychic events. I’m an infj because of how I solve things; because of my gathering of knowledge through trends and behaviors. I’m an introvert. I will hurt myself before hurting another.

  7. I was willing to take your comments seriously until I noticed that some of your information is incorrect. The Myers Briggs site states that INFJ’s make up 2.3% of the world’s population not 1% as you state. You complain about misinformation and proceed to misinform.

    1. Hi Wendy! This article was written at least seven years ago so the statistics have changed since then. At the time I wrote this, the numbers matched what was on the Myers-Briggs web site. Since then they have changed. I’m glad you brought this to my attention because it alerts me to the outdated information. Thank you.

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