Facial Proportions Calculator

17 facial metrics calculated from 468 landmarks. Each scored against research-backed ideal values on a bell curve. The most comprehensive facial proportions analysis available.

Free. On-device. Deterministic — same photo, same score, every time.

All 17 Metrics

Balance
Facial Symmetry
1.00
Eyes
Canthal Tilt
Proportions
Facial Thirds
0% deviation
Jaw
Gonial Angle
128°
Structure
FWHR
1.90
Jaw
Jaw-Cheekbone Ratio
0.78
Eyes
Eye Spacing (IPD)
0.44
Midface
Nose Proportion
0.25
Lower Third
Lip Ratio
0.66
Proportions
Midface Ratio
0.42
Lower Third
Philtrum Length
0.33
Lower Third
Mouth-to-Nose Ratio
1.55
Eyes
Brow Ridge
1.20
Eyes
Eye Width
0.26
Eyes
Eyelid Exposure
0.42
Eyes
Eye Aspect Ratio
0.28
Eyes
Brow Tilt

How Scoring Works

Each metric is scored using a bell curve formula: 10 × exp(-severity × deviation²)

You score highest at the ideal value and decay exponentially as you deviate. This mirrors how plastic surgeons and craniofacial researchers assess facial proportions — small deviations from ideal have minimal impact, but large deviations are significantly penalized.

Your overall score is a weighted average of all 17 metrics. Weights are gender-specific because research shows different features matter more for perceived attractiveness in men vs women.

Weight Distribution

Male Weights (Top 5)

Symmetry16%
Canthal Tilt12%
Facial Thirds10%
Jawline8%
Midface Ratio8%

Female Weights (Top 5)

Symmetry14%
Canthal Tilt10%
Lip Ratio9%
Facial Thirds8%
Midface & Nose7% each

FAQ

What are ideal facial proportions?

Each metric has a specific ideal value from craniofacial research. Facial thirds should be equal (~33% each), midface ratio ~0.42, FWHR ~1.90, gonial angle ~128°. MogScore measures all 17 against these ideals.

What is the facial thirds rule?

The face is divided into three vertical sections: forehead to brow, brow to nose base, nose base to chin. Ideally each is roughly equal. Deviation is one of the most common facial harmony issues.

Is the golden ratio used?

MogScore uses metric-specific ideal values from research rather than a single golden ratio. Each metric has its own ideal value based on population studies, which is more scientifically accurate.