Objective: Pain acceptance is considered important for mental well-being with better functional outcomes for chronic pain patients. The present study explored whether pain-related variables (pain severity, pain interference, pain duration, and pain catastrophizing) and non-pain-related variables (personality traits) influence acceptance and additionally examined the interrelationship between the influencing variables and acceptance. Methods: One hundred patients with chronic pain from a multidisciplinary pain centre completed self-report questionnaires on acceptance, pain severity, interference of life, pain duration, pain catastrophizing, and personality. Results: Pain severity, pain interference, and pain duration had no significant corre...