Functional first
The calculator sits near the top so you can enter measurements immediately instead of scrolling through a long article first.
Free golden ratio face calculator
Enter a few simple face measurements to compare your facial proportions with the classic 1.618 golden ratio. This tool is built for people who want a quick golden ratio face check without uploading a photo.
Tool-first page
Measure your face in the mirror or from a straight portrait, then enter the numbers below. The calculator compares face length, face width, forehead width, cheekbone width, and jaw width.
Golden ratio score
This calculator is educational. Real-life attractiveness also depends on expression, styling, symmetry, skin quality, confidence, and cultural preference.
Search intent match
Most users searching this topic want three things: a quick way to test their face proportions, a simple explanation of the golden ratio, and clear guidance on whether the result is meaningful. This page keeps that intent focused around a working calculator.
The calculator sits near the top so you can enter measurements immediately instead of scrolling through a long article first.
After you calculate the score, the page explains what the ratio measures and what it does not measure.
Unlike upload-based beauty tools, this page does not require a selfie to check your facial proportions.
How to measure
The calculator is only as good as the numbers you enter. Use a straight portrait or a mirror, keep your head level, and measure the same way each time.
Do not measure from a tilted selfie. Use a portrait where the camera sits close to eye level and the face is not rotated.
Measure the widest visible part of the forehead, cheekbones, and jaw before checking the full face width and total face length.
Centimeters and inches both work. What matters is using the same unit across every field so the ratios stay consistent.
If the ratio looks unusually high or low, repeat the measurement once more. Small placement errors can change the score noticeably.
Examples
These examples show how the same tool can be used for different facial proportion patterns. The score is directional, not a clinical measurement.
| Scenario | Main measurement pattern | What it usually means |
|---|---|---|
| Close to 1.618 | Face length is about 1.60 to 1.64 times face width. | The main length-to-width proportion is close to the classical phi target. |
| Longer face pattern | Face length is much larger than face width. | The score may drop because the outline reads longer than the target range. |
| Wider face pattern | Face width sits close to face length. | The score may drop because the face ratio looks shorter and broader than phi. |
Different attractive faces can fall outside the classical ratio. The calculator measures one aesthetic reference, not a universal rule.
Score guide
A higher score means the measurements you entered are closer to the ratio pattern used by this calculator. It does not mean a face is objectively better than another face.
Your proportions are close to the target range used in many golden ratio face discussions.
Your face measurements still look fairly balanced even if they do not match the target exactly.
One or two measurements may be moving the score away from the target. Retesting can help confirm the pattern.
Either the face proportions are further from the model or the manual measurements need another pass.
Limits and edge cases
The golden ratio is only one framework. Use it as a structured way to think about proportion, not as a complete beauty judgment.
Even a small error in where you place the measuring points can change the result.
Attractiveness also depends on culture, style, expression, symmetry, and features that do not reduce to one ratio.
If you measure from a close selfie, lens distortion can stretch or compress parts of the face.
Related pages
This calculator handles manual ratio checks. Use the related tools below when your intent is broader, photo-based, or score-based.
Choose this page if you want a direct AI score from one selfie instead of entering measurements manually.
Internal tool AI Beauty Photo TestChoose this page if your question is mainly about how a specific photo, angle, and lighting affect the result.
Internal guide How Pretty Am I Scientifically?Choose this page if you want the explanatory article about what facial science and AI can really measure.
It is a tool that compares a few basic facial measurements with the classical 1.618 golden ratio to estimate how close your proportions are to that reference.
No. This page is built as a manual calculator. You can measure from a mirror or a straight portrait and enter the values yourself.
It is a popular mathematical reference used in discussions about proportion, but it is not a universal law of attractiveness.
Small differences in where you place the forehead, cheekbone, or jaw points can change the final score. Retest with a straighter reference image if needed.
Use Rate My Face or AI Beauty Photo Test when you want upload-based AI feedback. This page is specifically for manual proportion calculations.