Hunter eyes test

"Hunter eyes" is internet slang, not a medical term — but the look it describes is made of measurable parts: positive canthal tilt, relatively narrow vertical eye opening, and a low-set, straight brow. Instead of guessing from a mirror, this test measures each component from one photo.

You get your canthal tilt in degrees, eye aspect (openness) and brow position against published ranges, drawn on your own face. Descriptive numbers — what your eye area is — rather than a verdict on it.

Drop a front-on photo to measure your eye area — 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, eyes open, level head, no smile.
  2. The engine measures canthal tilt, eye openness and brow position from 478 landmarks.
  3. See each measurement on your photo, with the typical range for context.

Frequently asked questions

What actually makes eyes read as "hunter eyes"?

The cluster usually cited: positive canthal tilt, a comparatively narrow vertical eye aperture (less visible upper eyelid), and low, straight brows sitting close to the eyes. Each is measurable; this test reports all three.

Hunter eyes vs almond eyes — what is the difference?

Almond describes the eye outline shape; hunter describes the whole eye-area impression including brow position and tilt. An almond eye with high brows and neutral tilt will not read as "hunter". The terms overlap but measure different things.

Can I get hunter eyes naturally?

Brow position changes slightly with expression habits and age, but canthal tilt and orbital structure are fixed. Most "transformation" content is lighting, brow grooming and camera angle — which is also the honest, free lever available to everyone.

Is my photo stored?

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

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