Start Test

Welcome back

IQ Scores

IQ Score Distribution: What Percentage of People Have Your IQ?

By the Quizvo Team  Β·  7 min read  Β·  Updated April 2026

Statistical graph representing IQ score distribution
← Back to Blog

The IQ Bell Curve

IQ scores are designed to follow a normal distribution β€” the famous "bell curve" β€” with a mean of 100 and a standard deviation of 15. This means that in any given population, the majority of people score near the average, with progressively fewer people at the extremes. The distribution is symmetrical: an equal number of people score above and below 100.

Understanding exactly where any score falls in the population requires knowing two things: the mean (100) and the standard deviation (15). Each standard deviation above or below the mean corresponds to a percentile rank that tells you what percentage of the population you score above.

IQ Score Distribution Table

IQ Score RangeClassification% of PopulationPercentile Range
Above 145Profoundly Gifted0.1%Top 0.1%
130–145Highly Gifted / Very Superior2.1%98th–99.9th
120–129Superior6.7%91st–97th
110–119High Average16.1%75th–90th
90–109Average50.0%25th–74th
80–89Low Average16.1%9th–24th
70–79Borderline6.7%2nd–8th
55–69Mild Intellectual Disability2.1%Below 2nd
Below 55Moderate–Profound Disability0.1%Below 0.1%

How to Interpret Your Percentile

Your percentile rank tells you what percentage of the general population you scored above. An IQ of 115 corresponds to approximately the 84th percentile β€” meaning you scored higher than 84% of the population. An IQ of 130 puts you at the 98th percentile β€” above 98% of people.

Key reference points on the bell curve:

The Standard Deviation Rule

Because IQ is normally distributed with SD=15, the standard statistical properties of normal distributions apply:

This means an IQ of 145 is genuinely exceptional β€” approximately 1 in 1,000 people. An IQ of 160 (5 SDs above the mean) corresponds to roughly 1 in 3.5 million β€” though measurement reliability at these extremes becomes questionable.

Why Average IQ Varies by Country and Era

IQ tests are periodically "re-normed" β€” the average is reset to 100 for new populations. This is necessary because raw scores have risen dramatically over time (the Flynn Effect). Without renorming, modern populations would score far above historical baselines.

When comparing IQ across countries, different populations have been measured against different national norms. An IQ of 100 in Finland has the same within-country meaning as an IQ of 100 in South Korea β€” it simply means "average for that country" β€” but the populations may differ substantially in absolute test performance.

Find Out Your IQ Score and Percentile

Take our free, normed IQ test and see exactly where you rank in the population distribution today.

Take the Free IQ Test β†’