Facial symmetry test

A symmetry test pairs up left/right landmarks — eye corners, mouth corners, nose edges — and measures how closely they mirror across the facial midline. This one aligns to your midline, corrects for head roll, and scores the mirrored pairs from one front-on photo.

Two honest caveats before you test: perfect symmetry is not the goal (perfectly mirrored faces look uncanny, and some asymmetry is what makes a face look alive), and a turned head or side lighting will ruin the measurement. Shoot square-on with even light.

Drop a front-on photo to test your symmetry — free
Drop a photo here or click to choose

No account. Photos are analyzed then immediately discarded — never stored, never used for training.

How it works

  1. Drop one front-on photo — square to the camera, even lighting, neutral expression.
  2. The engine aligns your facial midline, corrects roll, and mirrors left/right landmark pairs.
  3. Get your symmetry reading with the compared pairs shown on your own photo.

Frequently asked questions

Does facial symmetry really matter for attractiveness?

The link is real but modest — one of the better-replicated findings in attractiveness research, and one of the most exaggerated online. In standardized, well-lit photos almost everyone scores high, so symmetry separates faces less than the internet suggests.

Why did I score lower than expected?

The most common cause is the photo, not the face: a small head turn, a half-smile, or light coming from one side all read as asymmetry. Re-shoot square-on with even light before reading anything into a low score.

Is this a medical assessment?

No. It is a descriptive photo measurement. Genuine structural asymmetry is something a clinician assesses in person — a phone photo is more likely measuring your camera than your face.

Is my photo stored?

No. Photos are analyzed and immediately discarded — never stored, never used for training.

Related