Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS): Free Self-Assessment

Fatigue is more than just feeling tired. It is a persistent, overwhelming exhaustion that can drain your motivation, impair your concentration, and make even simple daily tasks feel unmanageable. The Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS) is one of the most widely used clinical tools for measuring how severely fatigue affects your daily functioning. Developed by Krupp et al. in 1989 and cited over 7,000 times in academic research, it was originally designed for people with multiple sclerosis and lupus but is now used across a wide range of neurological and medical conditions.

This free self-assessment takes just two minutes. If you also experience difficulties with memory or attention, you may find our Cognitive Failures Questionnaire useful alongside this scale.

Take the Fatigue Severity Scale

Recallify logo

Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS)

9 statements about fatigue · Takes 2 minutes

About this scale: The Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS) measures how severely fatigue affects your daily life. Developed by Krupp et al. (1989), it is widely used in clinical practice for conditions including MS, brain injury, stroke, and chronic fatigue. This is not a diagnosis — it is a self-reflection tool to help you understand the impact of fatigue on your functioning.

Instructions: Read each statement and rate how much you agree, based on your experience over the past week. 1 means you strongly disagree and 7 means you strongly agree.

Your answers are not stored or transmitted. Everything runs in your browser.

Statement 1 of 9
My motivation is lower when I am fatigued.
Statement 2 of 9
Exercise brings on my fatigue.
Statement 3 of 9
I am easily fatigued.
Statement 4 of 9
Fatigue interferes with my physical functioning.
Statement 5 of 9
Fatigue causes frequent problems for me.
Statement 6 of 9
My fatigue prevents sustained physical functioning.
Statement 7 of 9
Fatigue interferes with carrying out certain duties and responsibilities.
Statement 8 of 9
Fatigue is among my three most disabling symptoms.
Statement 9 of 9
Fatigue interferes with my work, family, or social life.
0
out of 7 (mean score)
1.0 – 2.9
Low Fatigue
3.0 – 3.9
Borderline
4.0 – 5.4
Significant Fatigue
5.5 – 7.0
Severe Fatigue

Reducing Cognitive Fatigue Day to Day

When fatigue drains your mental energy, even small tasks feel overwhelming. Recallify helps by capturing information through voice, automatically extracting tasks, and providing smart reminders, so you can conserve cognitive resources for what matters most.

Important: This scale uses the FSS developed by Krupp, LaRocca, Muir-Nash & Steinberg (1989). It is a self-reflection tool, not a diagnosis. Fatigue can result from many causes including sleep problems, medical conditions, medication, stress, or lifestyle factors. If your score concerns you, please speak with your GP. If fatigue is persistent and unexplained, clinical investigation is recommended.
Krupp LB, LaRocca NG, Muir-Nash J, Steinberg AD. The fatigue severity scale: Application to patients with multiple sclerosis and systemic lupus erythematosus. Arch Neurol. 1989;46(10):1121–1123.

What Does the FSS Measure?

The FSS consists of nine statements about fatigue and its impact on motivation, physical functioning, duties, and social life. You rate each statement from 1 (strongly disagree) to 7 (strongly agree) based on your experience over the past week. The mean score across all nine items gives a result between 1.0 and 7.0.

The original validation study found a mean score of 2.3 in healthy adults, while patients with MS averaged 4.8. A mean score of 4.0 or above is widely used as the threshold for clinically significant fatigue. The FSS has strong internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha of 0.88) and good test-retest reliability, making it a stable measure of how fatigue affects your life over time.

How Is the FSS Scored?

Your total is calculated by adding all nine item scores and dividing by nine, giving a mean between 1.0 and 7.0. We display four interpretive bands: low fatigue (1.0 to 2.9, consistent with the healthy population average), borderline (3.0 to 3.9, above average but below the clinical threshold), significant fatigue (4.0 to 5.4, above the clinical cut-off), and severe fatigue (5.5 to 7.0, substantial impact across daily life). A large Swiss validation study confirmed the 4.0 cut-off across multiple conditions including MS, stroke, Parkinson’s, and narcolepsy.

Why Fatigue Matters for Cognitive Health

Fatigue does not just affect your body. It directly impairs cognitive function, slowing processing speed, reducing working memory capacity, and making it harder to plan, organise, and follow through on tasks. For people living with MS, acquired brain injuries, or ADHD, cognitive fatigue is often the most debilitating daily symptom. Understanding the severity of your fatigue is a practical first step toward managing it, whether through pacing strategies, structured routines, energy management, or using external tools to reduce cognitive load.

How Recallify Helps When Fatigue Drains Your Energy

When fatigue makes it hard to think clearly, having a reliable system to fall back on makes a real difference. Recallify captures information through voice recordings so you do not have to type or write when your energy is low. It automatically extracts tasks, provides structured reminders and daily planning, and offers a searchable memory bank you can query in natural language. The result is less mental effort spent trying to remember and organise, and more energy preserved for the things that matter.

iOS App

Get Recallify from App Store today.

Android App

Get Recallify from Google Play  today.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this fatigue test a medical diagnosis?

No. The FSS is a screening tool that measures how fatigue affects your functioning. It cannot diagnose the cause of your fatigue. Many conditions can cause significant fatigue, including MS, brain injury, sleep disorders, anaemia, thyroid problems, depression, and others. If your score is 4.0 or above, we would encourage you to speak with your GP.

The average score for healthy adults is approximately 2.3. A mean score of 4.0 or above is generally considered the threshold for clinically significant fatigue. Scores between 3.0 and 3.9 are borderline and may warrant monitoring.

No. Fatigue and sleepiness are related but distinct. Sleepiness is the tendency to fall asleep, while fatigue is a persistent feeling of exhaustion and reduced capacity for physical or mental effort. You can be severely fatigued without feeling sleepy, and vice versa. The FSS specifically measures fatigue, not sleepiness.

Yes. The FSS was originally developed for MS and has since been validated for use with brain injury, stroke, Parkinson’s, chronic fatigue syndrome, and many other conditions. Fatigue is also extremely common in ADHD, though less widely recognised. Your results can be a useful conversation starter with your clinician.

The FSS asks about the past week, so you can repeat it weekly or fortnightly to track changes. This is especially useful if you are trying new management strategies, starting medication, or adjusting your routine, as it gives you a way to measure whether fatigue is improving.

No. This tool runs entirely in your browser. No answers or scores are stored, transmitted, or shared.

Scroll to Top
Recallify
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.