Social Anxiety vs. Shyness: Signs, Test & Help
How to tell ordinary shyness from social anxiety disorder — the key signs, a 3-question validated screen (Mini-SPIN), and what actually helps.
Lots of people are shy. Far fewer have social anxiety disorder — but the two get confused constantly, which is a problem, because one is a personality trait and the other is a treatable condition. The difference isn't whether you feel nervous around people; it's how much that fear runs your life.
Take the 3-question screen
The Mini-SPIN takes under a minute.
Key takeaways
- Shyness is a trait; social anxiety disorder is a diagnosable, treatable condition.
- The line is avoidance and distress: social anxiety makes you avoid situations and suffer real impairment.
- The Mini-SPIN flags likely social anxiety with about 90% accuracy at a cut-off of 6.
- Cognitive behavioural therapy is highly effective — most people improve significantly.
Shyness or social anxiety?
| Shyness | Social anxiety disorder | |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | A personality trait | A mental-health condition |
| Intensity | Mild, passing discomfort | Intense, persistent fear |
| Avoidance | You may hesitate but still take part | You avoid or endure with dread |
| Physical signs | A little nervous | Blushing, racing heart, shaking, nausea |
| Impact | Little effect on daily life | Interferes with work, study, relationships |
| Anticipation | Brief nerves beforehand | Days or weeks of worry in advance |
The signs that point to social anxiety
Tap the ones that regularly apply to you.
Do these sound familiar?
Threshold: 4 or more.
Myth
Social anxiety is just extreme shyness — you grow out of it or push through it.
What helps
If social anxiety fits
- Name it — Recognising it as a treatable condition — not a flaw — is genuinely the first step. It takes the shame out of seeking help.
- Screen and reflect — Use the Mini-SPIN result as a starting point. Note the situations you avoid and how much they cost you.
- Try evidence-based self-help — Gradual exposure, dropping safety behaviours (over-rehearsing, avoiding eye contact), and reducing post-event rumination all help. Self-help CBT books and apps have good evidence.
- Ask about CBT — Cognitive behavioural therapy is the first-line treatment and is highly effective. A GP can refer you, and in some places you can self-refer to talking therapies.
- Discuss medication if needed — For more severe social anxiety, SSRIs are an effective option your doctor can discuss alongside therapy.
Frequently asked questions
What's the difference between shyness and social anxiety?
What Mini-SPIN score means social anxiety?
Can social anxiety be cured?
Is social anxiety the same as introversion?
Free interactive test · ~1 min
Take the Mini-SPIN social anxiety test
Three quick questions to see whether your social fears cross the threshold that suggests it's worth getting support.
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References
This guide is educational and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified clinician about your individual circumstances.