Qualitative & quantitative · Use case
A survey is qualitative and quantitative
It is the most common question in survey research, and the answer is not one or the other. A survey is an instrument; whether the data it produces is qualitative or quantitative depends entirely on the question. This page gives the direct answer, shows the two kinds of survey question with examples, and explains how to design a survey that does both well.
The short answer
A survey is both
A survey's closed-ended questions — ratings, multiple choice, yes/no — produce quantitative data. Its open-ended questions produce qualitative data. Most surveys carry both. The instrument is neither qualitative nor quantitative; the question type is.
The quantitative side
Closed-ended questions
Rating scales, multiple choice, yes/no, ranking. They constrain the answer to a value you can count and compare across a group.
The qualitative side
Open-ended questions
"Tell us why," "describe what changed." They invite an answer in the respondent's own words — the reason behind the number.