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Epworth Sleepiness Scale: Score Yourself & What It Means

How the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) works: rate 8 everyday situations, score 0–24, and find out whether your daytime sleepiness is normal, mild, moderate, or severe.

Maya Lindqvist · Senior Health WriterMedically reviewed by Dr. James Okonkwo, MDPublished June 7, 2026 · 7 min read

Feeling tired is one thing. Actually dozing off during the day — in a meeting, at a red light, mid-conversation — is another. The Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) is the simple, clinically validated tool that tells the two apart by asking one question eight times: how likely are you to fall asleep here?

Score yourself

Rate your chance of dozing in each situation — not just feeling tired, but actually falling asleep.

Try it nowFree · runs right here · ~2 min

Key takeaways

  • The ESS rates 8 real-life situations from 0 (would never doze) to 3 (high chance of dozing).
  • Totals run 0–24; 0–7 is normal, 8–9 mild, 10–15 moderate, and 16–24 severe daytime sleepiness.
  • It measures your general tendency to fall asleep — not how tired you feel in the moment.
  • Persistent scores of 11+ are worth discussing with a doctor, who may look for sleep apnoea or other causes.

How the Epworth scale is scored

For each of eight situations you rate how likely you'd be to doze off, on this scale:

Chance of dozingPoints
Would never doze0
Slight chance of dozing1
Moderate chance of dozing2
High chance of dozing3

The eight situations range from the obvious (lying down to rest in the afternoon) to the more telling (sitting and talking to someone, or stopped in traffic for a few minutes). Add the eight ratings for a total between 0 and 24.

What your score means

Epworth Sleepiness Scale: drag to interpret your score

024
9 / 24Mild daytime sleepiness

A little more sleepiness than average — worth keeping an eye on your sleep habits.

What a high score might mean

The Epworth scale doesn't diagnose anything — it flags that something is disrupting your sleep or alertness. Common culprits behind a high score include:

  • Obstructive sleep apnoea — repeated pauses in breathing that fragment sleep, often signposted by loud snoring and morning headaches.
  • Insufficient or poor-quality sleep — the simplest and most common cause.
  • Insomnia — paradoxically, chronic insomnia can leave you both wired at night and sleepy by day.
  • Other causes — certain medications, depression, thyroid problems, or conditions like narcolepsy.

Myth

Feeling tired all the time is the same as a high Epworth score.

What to do next

Should you see a doctor about daytime sleepiness?

Is your Epworth score 16 or higher, or do you ever doze while driving?

Frequently asked questions

What is a normal Epworth Sleepiness Scale score?
A total of 0–7 is considered normal daytime alertness. 8–9 is mild sleepiness, 10–15 is moderate, and 16–24 is severe. Most people without a sleep disorder score in the lower half of the range.
What Epworth score means I should see a doctor?
A persistent score of 11 or more is generally worth discussing with a doctor, and a score of 16 or more — or any dozing while driving — warrants prompt medical review. The scale points to a problem; a doctor finds the cause.
Does a high Epworth score mean I have sleep apnoea?
Not on its own. Excessive daytime sleepiness is a common feature of obstructive sleep apnoea, but it can also come from insufficient sleep, insomnia, medication, or other conditions. A sleep-apnoea screen like STOP-BANG and, if needed, a sleep study help confirm the cause.
What's the difference between sleepiness and tiredness?
Sleepiness is the tendency to actually fall asleep; tiredness or fatigue is feeling low on energy without necessarily dozing off. The Epworth scale measures sleepiness specifically, which is why it asks about your chance of falling asleep in passive situations.

Free interactive test · ~2 min

Take the Epworth Sleepiness Scale

Eight quick situations, one score. Find out whether your daytime sleepiness is normal or worth a closer look.

Take the Epworth test

Keep reading

References

  1. 1.Johns MW (1991). A new method for measuring daytime sleepiness: the Epworth Sleepiness Scale. Sleep, 14(6), 540–545.
  2. 2.Johns MW (1992). Reliability and factor analysis of the Epworth Sleepiness Scale. Sleep, 15(4), 376–381.
  3. 3.NHS — Excessive daytime sleepiness (hypersomnia)

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.