Free to try · Fast AI face analysis · Private upload flow
The tool turns a normal face photo into a structured facial attractiveness score and practical improvement plan in a few steps.
Use a front-facing image with your full face visible. A neutral expression gives the AI the cleanest view of your real facial proportions.
Hold the camera straight on. High or low angles can exaggerate the forehead, chin, jawline, or nose and make your attractiveness score less reliable.
The analyzer maps facial landmarks around the eyes, cheekbones, nose, lips, jaw, chin, and hairline to estimate symmetry and facial harmony.
You receive an AI attractiveness score with context for facial symmetry, proportions, masculine structure, skin quality, and likely looksmaxxing priorities.
The result is designed to point you toward practical next steps, from grooming and skincare to jawline, hairstyle, posture, and facial harmony checks.
The AI does not judge one feature in isolation. It estimates the way your facial structure, skin, proportions, and masculine cues work together.
The AI compares the left and right sides of your face for visible asymmetry. Symmetry is not everything, but strong balance usually improves perceived facial attractiveness.
Harmony looks at whether your eyes, nose, lips, cheekbones, jaw, and chin fit together as one balanced face instead of one feature overpowering the rest.
The tool estimates proportion relationships often discussed in golden ratio face analysis, such as vertical thirds, feature spacing, and overall facial balance.
For men, the model pays attention to masculine markers such as jaw width, chin projection, brow structure, cheekbone support, and lower-face development.
Eye spacing, canthal tilt, eyelid exposure, and under-eye support can change whether a face looks alert, tired, youthful, intense, or soft.
A visible mandibular angle, chin-neck separation, and balanced lower third often raise male face ratings because they make the face read stronger and leaner.
Clear skin, even tone, low inflammation, and healthy texture affect first impressions and can change how attractive the same facial structure appears.
The analyzer considers midface length, mouth-to-chin distance, chin height, and lower-face proportion because small ratio shifts can change facial harmony.
A facial attractiveness score is a directional rating, not a life sentence. Use the tier and breakdown to decide what to improve first.
Facial harmony is the reason two men with similar individual features can receive different ratings. The whole face matters more than one isolated measurement.
Golden ratio analysis compares facial distances and proportions. It is useful context, but it should be treated as one signal inside a broader face rating, not a perfect beauty formula.
In attractiveness research, average does not mean boring. It often means the face has familiar, balanced proportions without unusual distortions that pull attention away from harmony.
Male dimorphism covers cues such as jaw width, chin strength, brow structure, facial leanness, and cheekbone support. These traits can affect whether a face reads as soft, average, rugged, or highly masculine.
Looksmaxxing works best when it is targeted. Use the result to fix the factor that is dragging your score down instead of copying random advice.
Build a consistent routine, reduce inflammation, track acne patterns, and compare progress with the Acne Analyzer or Skin Analyzer.
Check body-fat level, neck posture, facial hair shape, and lower-third balance. Use the Jawline Analyzer to isolate jaw definition from total attractiveness.
Compare your face shape, golden ratio signals, and facial harmony before changing style. Hair, beard length, and glasses can visually rebalance long, short, narrow, or wide faces.
Improve sleep, reduce puffiness, manage under-eye darkness, and evaluate canthal tilt or eyelid exposure with the Canthal Tilt Test.
Match haircut, facial hair, and clothing to your facial archetype. A man with strong rugged features should not always use the same styling as a softer pretty-boy face.
Retake the test with neutral expression, eye-level framing, no filters, clean lighting, and hair away from your face. Bad photos can make good-looking men score lower.
An AI attractiveness test is most useful when it gives structure to a question people usually answer emotionally: "am I attractive?" Instead of relying on compliments, insults, dating app results, or a random "am I ugly test," MoggerMan evaluates visible facial signals that commonly influence first impressions.
Scientific research has repeatedly connected perceived attractiveness with facial symmetry, averageness, clear skin, sexually dimorphic features, and balanced proportions. Studies such as Langlois et al. (2000), Rhodes (2006), Perrett et al. (1999), and Dion et al. (1972) are often cited in discussions of facial attractiveness, the halo effect, and how appearance can influence social perception.
For men, the useful question is not only "am I pretty or ugly?" It is which features are helping or hurting the total presentation. A man can have average symmetry but a strong jawline, great skin but weak lower-third definition, or good facial harmony that is hidden by bad hair, poor posture, bloating, acne, or a photo angle that distorts the face.
The score should be read as a practical estimate, not a permanent verdict. AI can compare visible patterns and proportions, but attraction also depends on expression, movement, voice, confidence, fitness, grooming, personality, cultural preference, and context. Use the result as a starting point for smarter looksmaxxing, then validate changes through real-world feedback.
Use these internal tools to investigate the exact feature that affected your attractiveness score.