Choose one clear front photo
Use a straight, eye-level image. Avoid wide-angle selfies, tilted heads, strong shadows, or a smile that changes mouth width.
Enter a few consistent face measurements and compare three common face ratios with the 1.618 golden ratio reference. The calculator explains proportions without treating one number as a beauty rule.
Use pixels, millimeters, or any consistent unit from the same front-facing photo. The tool compares face height to width, eye distance to nose width, and mouth width to nose width.
Enter five measurements and calculate to compare your face ratios with the golden ratio reference.
Use a straight, eye-level image. Avoid wide-angle selfies, tilted heads, strong shadows, or a smile that changes mouth width.
Use the same unit for face height, face width, eye distance, nose width, and mouth width. Pixels from an editing app work fine.
Compare the score and individual ratios with the 1.618 reference, then retest if the photo setup was uneven.
The exact unit matters less than using consistent landmarks from the same image.
Measure from the visible upper face point or hairline area to the bottom of the chin. If the hairline is hidden, note that the height is an estimate.
Measure the widest visible cheek-to-cheek distance. Keep the line horizontal and avoid including hair volume.
Use a consistent eye-distance landmark and the widest visible nose-base width. Small landmark changes can shift the ratio.
Measure from mouth corner to mouth corner with a relaxed expression. A smile can widen this number and change the result.
The calculator uses a simplified set of ratios so the result stays understandable and easy to repeat.
| Metric | Reference | How to read it |
|---|---|---|
| Face height / width | Near 1.618 | A common golden ratio face reference, but real face shapes naturally vary. |
| Eye distance / nose width | Near 1.618 | Sensitive to whether you measure pupils, inner corners, or outer corners. |
| Mouth width / nose width | Near 1.618 | Expression and lip posture can change this ratio quickly. |
| Overall score | Average of three ratio scores | Useful for comparison between photos, not as a diagnosis or beauty verdict. |
Use the result to compare measurements, not to judge your face harshly.
The score is most useful when checking whether one photo is more centered and less distorted than another.
A strong overall score can hide one varied ratio. Review each metric to see which measurement affects the result.
Golden ratio analysis covers proportions. Use the symmetry test for left-right balance and the facial thirds test for vertical proportion.
A golden ratio face test compares selected face measurements with the 1.618 proportion reference. This calculator checks three simple face ratios from one photo.
Use the same unit on a front-facing photo. Measure face height, face width, eye distance, nose width, and mouth width, then enter the numbers into the calculator.
No. The golden ratio is a reference, not a universal beauty rule. Real faces can look balanced and attractive without matching 1.618 exactly.
Camera distance, lens distortion, head tilt, smile, shadows, hairline visibility, and landmark placement can all change the measured ratios.
No. A golden ratio face test compares proportions. A face symmetry test compares left-right facial balance.
No. It gives a proportion reference only. It should not be used to judge attractiveness, health, or personal value.