How to Calculate Perceived Stress Scale
What is Perceived Stress Scale?
The Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10) Calculator measures the degree to which life situations are appraised as stressful over the past month using 10 items, each rated 0-4, producing a widely-used indicator of subjective stress burden.
Formula
- TS
- Total PSS Score (points (0-40)) — Sum of all 10 items after reverse scoring, indicating overall perceived stress
- Qi
- Item Score (points (0-4)) — Response to each item: 0=Never, 1=Almost never, 2=Sometimes, 3=Fairly often, 4=Very often
- SL
- Stress Level (category) — Low (0-13), Moderate (14-26), or High (27-40) perceived stress
Step-by-Step Guide
- 1Rate 10 items on a 0 (never) to 4 (very often) scale for the past month
- 2Reverse-score items 4, 5, 7, and 8 (positive items: 4 becomes 0, 3 becomes 1, etc.)
- 3Sum all 10 items for a total score of 0-40
- 4Interpret: 0-13 low stress, 14-26 moderate stress, 27-40 high perceived stress
Worked Examples
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- ✕Forgetting to reverse-score items 4, 5, 7, and 8 which are positively worded (feeling confident, on top of things)
- ✕Using PSS scores for diagnostic purposes — the PSS measures subjective stress perception, not psychiatric diagnosis
- ✕Not recognizing that PSS scores are heavily influenced by current circumstances and should be interpreted in context
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a normal PSS-10 score?
The US population average PSS-10 score is approximately 13-16. Scores vary by age (younger adults score higher), gender (women average 1-2 points higher), and socioeconomic status.
How is perceived stress different from anxiety?
Perceived stress measures how overwhelmed you feel by life demands. Anxiety disorders involve persistent, excessive worry with specific diagnostic criteria. High PSS scores often co-occur with anxiety but are not equivalent — stress is situational, while anxiety may be dispositional.
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