
Mensa International – Welcome
Mensa is the world’s largest, oldest and most famous high IQ society – a thriving global community of around 150,000 highly intelligent people. There are active Mensa organisations …
American Mensa
The largest yearly confab of Mensans anywhere, the American Mensa Annual Gathering started as a small, two-day meet-and-greet at the New York Belmont in 1963. The event now spans …
Mensa Today – Mensa International
In order to join Mensa, you have to take an approved intelligence test - one which has been properly administered and supervised; and in that test, you need to attain a score within the …
About Mensa
To qualify for Mensa, you must have scored in the top 2 percent of the general population on any one of more than 200 accepted, standardized intelligence tests — including our Mensa …
IQ Test - FAQs – Mensa International
How do I qualify for Mensa? Membership of Mensa is open to persons who have attained a score within the upper two percent of the general population on an approved intelligence test that …
Mensa IQ Challenge – Mensa International
If you’re pleased with your score, you might want to consider taking a properly administered and supervised IQ test. If so, please get in touch with your local Mensa office (or contact Mensa …
Qualifying Test Scores for Mensa Membership
Many intelligence test scores will qualify you for Mensa, but Mensa’s supervisory psychologists will have to individually appraise the documentation. Almost any test with “achievement” in the …
Mensa's history
Mensa is an international society whose sole qualification for membership is a score in the top 2 percent of the general population on a standardized intelligence test. The word mensa …
How to Join Mensa
Dive into 120+ Special Interest Groups, from ancient baking to quilting, or connect with fellow Mensans online and around the world through hundreds of online Mensa communities. …
History of Mensa – Mensa International
Since Roland Berrill, the co-founder of Mensa, had felt that a formal constitution was unnecessary, Mensa had never had anything but the most rudimentary official structure.