The Entrepreneur
Smart, energetic and very perceptive people, who truly enjoy living on the edge. ESTPs are action-oriented pragmatists who love to be where the action is.
- Bold
- Rational and practical
- Original
Compatibility
How The Entrepreneur (ESTP) and The Architect (INTJ) connect in love, friendship, and work.
Overall match
69%
Good match
This pairing page shows how two MBTI personality types tend to match in romance, friendship, and work, with a compatibility score and a plain-language explanation of why.
By OnlineMBTITest Editorial Team · Published March 28, 2026 · Last updated June 16, 2026
| Aspect | Score |
|---|---|
| Overall match | 69% |
| Romance | 71% |
| Friendship | 69% |
| Work | 69% |
Smart, energetic and very perceptive people, who truly enjoy living on the edge. ESTPs are action-oriented pragmatists who love to be where the action is.
Strategic, independent thinkers with a plan for everything. INTJs combine imagination and rationality to turn their visions into reality.
Romance
71%
Friendship
69%
Work
69%
What ESTP relies on most is what INTJ trusts least, and the reverse is also true. That gap can frustrate, but it is exactly where each can stretch the other into an underused strength.
Romantically, this pair has plenty to learn from each other; intentional listening pays off with deep rewards.
Growth tip
Because you take in the world differently, agree on a habit of spelling things out: ESTP and INTJ avoid most friction by naming the concrete detail and the bigger picture explicitly, instead of assuming the other already sees it.
As friends, mutual curiosity drives the bond — different worldviews keep the conversation interesting.
On a team, complementary planning styles cover each other's blind spots — one drives closure, the other keeps options open.
Compare any two of the 16 personality types.
The score estimates how naturally these two types align across the four MBTI dimensions, blending shared preferences with the balance that differences can bring. A higher number suggests an easier natural fit, while a lower number highlights areas worth discussing. It is a guide for reflection, not a prediction or a measure of how happy any real couple will be.
Yes. Any two of the 16 types can build a strong, lasting relationship. The score points to strengths to enjoy and differences to talk through, not to whether you belong together. Communication, respect, and shared goals matter far more than type. Treat this pairing as a conversation starter rather than a rule about your future.
The same two types can fit differently depending on context. Work often rewards complementary strengths, friendship rewards shared interests, and romance rewards emotional connection. Splitting the score into three views gives a clearer, more honest picture than a single number, so you can see exactly where this pairing tends to shine and where it needs care.
Not at all. Opposite preferences can balance a relationship when both people understand and value them. Many strong partnerships pair very different types who fill in each other's blind spots. A pairing with more differences simply needs more deliberate communication. Difference is an opportunity to grow together, not a sign that a match cannot work.
Start by reading each type's strengths and growth areas, then talk openly about where your preferences differ. Agree on how you will handle decisions, planning, and downtime. Small habits, like naming your needs clearly and respecting each other's pace, improve any pairing far more than the type letters ever could. Compatibility grows with effort over time.
Visit the main compatibility page to compare any two of the 16 types, or take the free 12-question test first to confirm your own type. Each pairing has its own page with romance, friendship, and work scores. You can explore as many combinations as you like, with no signup and no limit on how often you check.