Confidential Scheduling subject to availability Tulsa & surrounding
Professional adult IQ testing in Tulsa – whether you need an assessment for career advancement, graduate school applications, Mensa admission, or personal insight, we connect you with licensed psychologists in the Tulsa area.
Testing that may provide qualifying evidence for Mensa admission and preparation for the high-IQ society. American Mensa's published prior-evidence list includes WAIS-IV and Stanford-Binet 5; verify current acceptance of WAIS-5 before testing.
Book your WAIS-IV & WAIS-5 - a comprehensive adult cognitive assessments with a licensed psychologist in Tulsa today.
Licensed psychologists WAIS-IV & WAIS-5 assessments Comprehensive report Confidential Serving the Tulsa area
Adult IQ Testing in Tulsa: city context
Tulsa is the principal city of northeastern Oklahoma's Green Country region. The U.S. Census Bureau estimated 416,209 residents in 2025, up from 413,066 counted in 2020. The city covers approximately 197.53 square miles of land and serves as a regional center for healthcare, aerospace, energy, finance, education, logistics, advanced manufacturing, and professional services.
Local assessment resources include The University of Tulsa, Oklahoma State University–Tulsa, Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences, Oral Roberts University, Tulsa Community College, Saint Francis Health System, Hillcrest HealthCare System, Ascension St. John, the Ernest Childers VA Outpatient Clinic, school psychology teams, and licensed private practices. These resources support cognitive assessment, gifted identification, learning-disability evaluation, disability documentation, career guidance, and neuropsychological care.
IQ, gender, and demographic context
Professional IQ tests use age-based national norms. They are not scored against a separate Tulsa norm for men, women, racial groups, ethnic groups, or neighborhoods. Research generally finds substantial overlap in overall IQ distributions by sex, while individual profiles can differ across verbal comprehension, visual-spatial reasoning, fluid reasoning, working memory, and processing speed.
Current Tulsa Census context:
Female residents: 50.9% of the city population.
Children and adolescents: 24.1% of residents are under age 18, making school-based and pediatric assessment an important local need.
Older adults: 15.3% are age 65 or older, relevant to memory, neurological, disability, and capacity evaluations.
Racial and ethnic diversity: Census estimates report 54.4% White alone, 14.0% Black alone, 4.2% American Indian or Alaska Native alone, 3.5% Asian alone, 17.1% two or more races, and 19.8% Hispanic or Latino.
Language context: 20.7% of residents age five and older speak a language other than English at home; evaluators should consider language dominance, interpreter needs, acculturation, and test validity.
Foreign-born residents: 12.3%, reinforcing the importance of culturally and linguistically informed assessment.
Educational attainment: 87.6% of adults age 25 and older are high-school graduates and 33.6% hold a bachelor's degree or higher.
Disability context: 11.8% of residents under age 65 report a disability, a reminder that cognitive scores should be interpreted alongside adaptive functioning, health, and access needs.
No authoritative public dataset establishes valid Tulsa IQ averages by gender, race, ethnicity, or neighborhood. A psychologist interprets an individual's results in light of age, education, language, culture, disability, health, effort, and testing conditions rather than assigning ability from demographic membership.
What is adult IQ testing?
Adult IQ testing is a standardized method to measure cognitive abilities and intellectual potential in individuals aged 16 and older. Professional IQ tests are administered by licensed psychologists in a controlled environment to ensure accuracy and reliability. Unlike online quizzes, clinical assessments provide a full-scale IQ score along with detailed breakdowns of verbal comprehension, perceptual reasoning, working memory, and processing speed.
In Tulsa, adult IQ testing is commonly used for:
Career guidance: Identifying cognitive strengths to inform career decisions and professional development.
Graduate school applications: Some programs require cognitive assessments for admission or scholarship consideration.
Mensa admission: High-IQ societies require official test scores for membership.
Neuropsychological evaluation: Assessing cognitive function following injury, illness, or as part of a clinical evaluation.
Personal insight: Understanding your cognitive profile for personal growth and self-awareness.
Who should get adult IQ testing?
Adult IQ testing is beneficial for a wide range of individuals in various situations:
Career changers: Adults exploring new career paths who want to understand their cognitive strengths and how they align with different professions.
Graduate school applicants: Individuals applying to graduate programs that require or recommend cognitive assessments.
Mensa candidates: Those seeking admission to Mensa or other high-IQ societies.
Executive coaching clients: Professionals working with coaches to maximize their leadership potential.
Individuals with ADHD or learning disabilities: Adults who suspect they may have an undiagnosed condition that affects their cognitive performance.
Curious individuals: Anyone who wants to better understand their intellectual strengths and weaknesses.
The WAIS-IV and WAIS-5: gold standard tests for adults
The WAIS-IV (Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale® – Fourth Edition) and the newer WAIS-5 (Fifth Edition) are the most widely used IQ tests for adults aged 16–90. They provide a Full-Scale IQ (FSIQ) and multiple index scores:
Verbal Comprehension Index (VCI): Measures verbal reasoning, vocabulary, and knowledge.
Perceptual Reasoning Index (PRI) / Visual Spatial & Fluid Reasoning: Assesses non-verbal reasoning, visual-spatial processing, and problem-solving.
Working Memory Index (WMI): Measures attention, concentration, and the ability to hold and manipulate information in memory.
Processing Speed Index (PSI): Assesses the speed of processing visual information and performing mental tasks.
Both tests are normed on large, representative samples of U.S. adults and are updated regularly to ensure accuracy. The test takes approximately 60–90 minutes to administer and is conducted one-on-one by a trained psychologist.
The adult IQ testing process: step by step
Understanding the testing process can help reduce anxiety and prepare you for a successful assessment:
Initial consultation (15–20 minutes): A brief phone or video call with the psychologist to discuss your goals, concerns, and background. This helps determine the right test and approach.
Testing session (60–90 minutes): You meet one-on-one with a licensed psychologist in a quiet, comfortable room. The psychologist administers the WAIS-IV or WAIS-5, which includes a series of subtests measuring various cognitive domains. Breaks are offered as needed.
Scoring and interpretation (1–2 days): The psychologist scores the test and analyzes the results. They consider your age, background, and any relevant medical or educational history.
Feedback session (45–60 minutes): The psychologist meets with you to explain the results. They discuss your Full-Scale IQ, index scores, strengths, and areas for growth. They also provide tailored recommendations for career, education, or personal development.
Comprehensive written report (5–7 days): You receive a detailed report with all scores, normative comparisons, and actionable next steps. This report can be shared with employers, schools, or other professionals.
The entire process from consultation to report usually takes 1–2 weeks, depending on scheduling. The testing itself is non-invasive and designed to be engaging for adults.
IQ testing for career guidance
One of the most common reasons adults pursue IQ testing is to gain clarity about their career path. Your cognitive profile can reveal strengths that you may not have fully leveraged in your professional life.
For example:
High verbal comprehension: May indicate strength in roles involving communication, writing, teaching, or law.
High perceptual reasoning: May indicate strength in roles involving design, engineering, architecture, or technology.
High working memory: May indicate strength in roles requiring complex problem-solving, programming, or data analysis.
High processing speed: May indicate strength in roles requiring rapid decision-making, clerical work, or emergency response.
Understanding your cognitive strengths can help you make informed decisions about career changes, promotions, or additional education.
Mensa testing for adults
Mensa is the largest and oldest high-IQ society in the world, with members in over 100 countries. To qualify for Mensa, individuals must score at or above the 98th percentile on a standardized IQ test, which typically corresponds to an IQ of 130 or above.
In Tulsa, there is an active Mensa community that offers social events, intellectual discussions, and networking opportunities. Membership can provide a sense of belonging and community for gifted adults who may feel isolated in their everyday lives.
We offer guidance on Mensa qualification routes and testing that may generate prior-evidence documentation, subject to current American Mensa rules. Our psychologists are experienced in administering the tests required for Mensa membership and can help you navigate the application process.
Neuropsychological assessment for adults
In some cases, adult IQ testing is part of a broader neuropsychological evaluation. This may be recommended if you have experienced:
A traumatic brain injury (TBI)
A stroke or other neurological event
Memory concerns or cognitive decline
ADHD or other attention-related difficulties
A learning disability that was not identified in childhood
Our licensed psychologists are trained to distinguish between normal cognitive variation and conditions that may require intervention. A comprehensive evaluation can provide clarity and guide treatment recommendations.
How much does adult IQ testing cost in Tulsa?
Fees depend on whether the service is a stand-alone WAIS or Stanford-Binet assessment, an ADHD or learning evaluation, a medical neuropsychological evaluation, or a full psychological evaluation. Records review, additional tests, report length, feedback, and urgency also affect the total.
Ask for a written estimate. Insurance is more likely to contribute when testing is medically necessary and authorized than when it is requested for curiosity, career guidance, school admission, or Mensa documentation.
Tulsa Adult Education and Degree Attainment
Bachelor's degree or higher: 33.6% of Tulsa adults age 25 and older.
High-school completion: 87.6% of adults age 25 and older are high-school graduates or higher.
The University of Tulsa: Undergraduate, graduate, professional, and research programs with disability-support and career resources.
OSU–Tulsa: Degree-completion and graduate pathways designed for traditional and working adult students.
OSU Center for Health Sciences: Medicine, biomedical sciences, forensic sciences, public health, and clinical education.
Oral Roberts University: Undergraduate and graduate programs in psychology, counseling, business, education, nursing, and other fields.
Tulsa Community College: Transfer, technical, continuing-education, and workforce programs across multiple campuses.
OU–Tulsa and Langston University–Tulsa: Professional and graduate education serving the northeastern Oklahoma region.
Tulsa Tech: Career-technical training, certifications, and adult workforce development.
Documentation: Students seeking accommodations should verify the institution's required recency, diagnostic criteria, tests, and report elements before scheduling.
Tulsa Neuropsychological Services
Saint Francis Health System: Neurology, rehabilitation, specialty medicine, and behavioral-health referrals may include cognitive assessment when medically indicated.
Hillcrest HealthCare System: Neurological, rehabilitation, and hospital services may coordinate neuropsychological referrals.
Ascension St. John: Medical and neurological services with referral pathways for complex cognitive questions.
Laureate Psychiatric Clinic and Hospital: Behavioral-health services relevant to complex psychiatric and cognitive presentations.
OSU Center for Health Sciences: Academic medical and specialty resources, including behavioral-health and research programs.
Ernest Childers VA Outpatient Clinic: Eligible veterans may receive evaluation or referral through the Eastern Oklahoma VA system.
Private neuropsychologists: May evaluate brain injury, stroke, epilepsy, dementia, neurological illness, disability, ADHD, learning disorders, and forensic questions.
Scope: A WAIS score alone is not a complete neuropsychological evaluation; memory, attention, executive, language, motor, emotional, and functional measures may also be required.
Mensa Resources for Tulsa Adults
Local group: Green Country Mensa serves Tulsa and northeastern Oklahoma within American Mensa.
Eligibility: Membership requires a qualifying score at or above the 98th percentile on an accepted test.
Prior evidence: Adults may submit qualifying historical scores when the test, date, score, and documentation meet current rules.
Admission testing: Local test sessions and fees vary; verify the current calendar with American Mensa or the local group.
Private assessment: A licensed psychologist is more appropriate when the client also needs a formal IQ score, diagnostic interpretation, disability documentation, or a full report.
No citywide total: Reliable current membership counts for Tulsa are not published as a fixed city statistic.
Tulsa Adult ADHD Assessment
Comprehensive history: Developmental, educational, occupational, medical, sleep, substance-use, and mental-health history.
Attention measures: Rating scales, interviews, records, and performance-based tests may be used when clinically appropriate.
Cognitive testing: WAIS data may clarify working-memory and processing-speed patterns but cannot diagnose ADHD by itself.
Differential diagnosis: Anxiety, depression, trauma, sleep disorders, learning disabilities, autism, medical conditions, and medication effects can resemble or compound ADHD symptoms.
Local documentation: Colleges, graduate programs, professional exams, employers, and licensing boards may have different accommodation standards.
Provider options: Tulsa adults may seek evaluation through licensed psychologists, neuropsychologists, psychiatrists, medical systems, or university-affiliated clinics depending on need.
Tulsa Graduate School Preparation
The University of Tulsa: Graduate programs in psychology-related fields, business, engineering, computer science, law, health, and the liberal arts.
OSU–Tulsa and OSU Center for Health Sciences: Graduate, medical, forensic-science, biomedical, and public-health pathways.
OU–Tulsa: Professional and graduate programs in medicine, social work, public health, education, nursing, and architecture.
Oral Roberts University: Graduate programs in counseling, education, business, theology, nursing, and related areas.
Accommodation planning: Confirm documentation requirements before testing because universities and national testing organizations set separate standards.
Career fit: Cognitive testing should be integrated with grades, research experience, interests, values, personality, finances, and career goals.
Areas we serve
We support all areas of Tulsa.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between WAIS-IV and WAIS-5?
WAIS-5 is the newest version, released in late 2024. It offers updated norms, a five-factor model, and additional ancillary indices. We offer both WAIS-IV and WAIS-5 depending on your needs and the psychologist's recommendation.
How long does the test take?
The WAIS-IV or WAIS-5 takes 60–90 minutes to administer. With the consultation, feedback, and report, the entire process is about 1–2 weeks.
Do I need a referral?
No, you can book directly with our psychologists. We serve both self-referred and professionally referred adults.
Can I use the results for Mensa?
A complete psychologist's report may be submitted as prior evidence when the test edition, Full Scale IQ, administration conditions, and documentation satisfy current American Mensa rules. American Mensa's published list includes WAIS-IV; verify WAIS-5 acceptance before scheduling.
Is testing covered by insurance?
Some plans cover cognitive assessments when there is a clinical indication. Check with your provider.
How should I prepare for the test?
Get a good night's sleep, eat a healthy meal, and arrive relaxed. No specific preparation is needed.
What happens after the test?
You'll receive a comprehensive report with your scores and tailored recommendations for career, education, or personal development.
Can I take the test online?
Remote administration may be possible only in limited circumstances. The evaluator must confirm publisher guidance, test validity, state licensing, technology requirements, and acceptance by the receiving school or organization.
Can IQ testing help with career decisions?
Absolutely. Understanding your cognitive strengths can help you identify career paths that align with your natural abilities.
Does IQ change with age?
While IQ is relatively stable, some cognitive abilities (like processing speed) may decline with age, while others (like verbal comprehension) may improve. Testing provides a snapshot of your current cognitive functioning.