Upload a front-facing portrait
The tool works best when your full face outline is visible. Pull hair away from the cheeks and jaw, keep the camera at eye level, and avoid strong side shadows.
The tool works best when your full face outline is visible. Pull hair away from the cheeks and jaw, keep the camera at eye level, and avoid strong side shadows.
The detector estimates face length, cheekbone width, forehead width, jaw width, chin shape, and how clearly the portrait shows those landmarks.
You get a practical result such as oval, round, square, heart, oblong, or diamond, plus notes that explain why one photo may be more reliable than another.
Most real faces sit between categories. Use these descriptions as a map, not as a rigid label.
An oval face usually appears longer than it is wide, with balanced forehead, cheekbones, and jaw.
A round face often has similar width and length with soft cheeks and a gentle jawline.
A square face usually has a stronger jaw and similar width across forehead, cheekbones, and jaw.
A heart-shaped face often reads wider at the forehead or cheekbones and narrower toward the chin.
An oblong face appears longer than it is wide, often with a longer lower or midface.
A diamond face often has prominent cheekbones with a narrower forehead and chin.
A detector is most useful when the result helps you make a practical decision, not when it becomes a fixed identity label.
| Face shape | Common visual clues | Useful next step |
|---|---|---|
| Oval | Balanced proportions, softly tapered jaw, face length greater than width. | Compare hair volume and glasses width without needing strong correction. |
| Round | Soft cheek area, gentle jaw, width and length feel close. | Try styles that add vertical structure or clearer side framing. |
| Square | Broad jaw, straighter sides, forehead and jaw look similar in width. | Use the result to compare softer frames or hairstyles with movement. |
| Heart | Wider upper face with narrower chin or lower face. | Balance the upper face with frames and styles that add lower-face weight. |
| Oblong | Longer face length with less cheek width. | Consider styles that add side volume or reduce extra height. |
| Diamond | Cheekbones are visually widest, with narrower forehead and chin. | Choose frames and hair shapes that respect cheekbone width. |
The detector focuses on visible geometry: whether the face is longer than it is wide, where the widest point appears, how the jaw tapers, whether the chin is rounded or pointed, and whether hair or shadows hide the outline. It does not judge attractiveness, identity, health, or personality. It simply compares the photo with common face shape patterns.
Face shape detection is sensitive to camera angle. A close selfie can widen the center of the face, a tilted head can shorten one side, and hair can make the jaw or cheekbones look wider or narrower. If two photos produce different labels, use the clearer front-facing portrait as the better signal.
Use even front light, keep the camera at eye level, step back from the lens, relax your expression, and show your full forehead, cheeks, jawline, and chin. If you have facial hair or glasses, test one photo with them and one without to see whether they change the detected outline.
A face shape detector is an online tool that estimates whether a photo reads closest to oval, round, square, heart, oblong, or diamond based on visible facial outline and proportions.
It can be useful when the photo is clear and front-facing, but it is still an estimate. Hair, beard, glasses, lens distance, head tilt, and lighting can change the detected shape.
Use a clear portrait at eye level with even front light. Keep your forehead, cheeks, jawline, and chin visible, and avoid strong filters or extreme angles.
Yes. Many people are between categories, such as oval-round or square-oblong. Use the result as a practical styling clue rather than a strict label.
No. Face shape describes the outline and proportions of the whole face. Facial symmetry describes left-right balance. They can influence each other but answer different questions.
Yes. That is one of the best uses. The result can help you compare frames, hair volume, bangs, side parts, and profile photos with more structure.