Try the Omni Face Calculator
Enter your measurements using the same unit throughout (mm, cm, or inches). The tool estimates facial balance, symmetry, and likely face shape.
Note: This calculator is for personal styling and educational use. It is not a medical or diagnostic tool.
What is an Omni Face Calculator?
The omni face calculator is a practical way to translate face measurements into simple, useful feedback. Instead of relying only on visual guesswork, it combines multiple dimensions—length, width, thirds, and left/right balance—into one summary score and shape estimate.
Think of it as a structured mirror: it helps you understand facial proportion patterns so you can make better choices for haircuts, glasses, makeup placement, beard design, photography angles, and even profile styling.
How this calculator works
1) Proportion ratio
The tool calculates a length-to-width ratio using face length and cheekbone width. Ratios closer to the classic “balanced zone” generally suggest more neutral geometry.
2) Symmetry score
You provide left and right midface distances. The smaller the difference, the higher the symmetry score. Perfect symmetry is rare, so even strong scores still include normal variation.
3) Facial thirds score
The face is often analyzed as three vertical sections:
- Upper third: hairline to brow
- Middle third: brow to base of nose
- Lower third: base of nose to chin
When these sections are close in size, the thirds score rises.
4) Width harmony
Forehead and jawline widths are compared. Large differences can indicate a more tapered or triangular shape; smaller differences often indicate a squarer or rounder outline.
How to measure accurately
- Use a soft tape measure or ruler in front of a mirror.
- Keep your head neutral—not tilted up or down.
- Take each measurement 2–3 times and use the average.
- Use the same unit for every field (all cm, all mm, etc.).
- For best precision, ask someone else to measure while you stay relaxed.
Understanding your result
Your final Omni Face Score is a weighted blend of symmetry, thirds balance, ratio, and width harmony. Use it as a guide rather than a judgment.
- 85–100: Highly balanced profile for most styles.
- 70–84: Balanced overall with one or two standout features.
- 50–69: Distinctive shape; styling contrast can work very well.
- Below 50: Strong structural uniqueness—great opportunity for personalized styling.
Face shape cheat sheet
Oval
Usually longer than wide, with gently narrower jawline than cheekbones. Most frame and haircut shapes work well.
Round
Length and width are similar; soft edges. Volume on top and angular frames can add definition.
Square
Forehead, cheekbones, and jawline are close in width with a stronger jaw. Rounded details can soften lines.
Heart
Wider forehead and narrower jawline. Chin-framing cuts and lower-face volume often balance proportions.
Diamond
Cheekbones are widest while forehead and jaw are narrower. Brow emphasis and textured top shapes can complement this profile.
Oblong
Face length is significantly greater than width. Side volume and reduced vertical height often create balance.
Why this matters for style
When you know your proportions, you can choose style decisions intentionally instead of randomly:
- Pick eyewear that offsets your dominant axis (height vs. width).
- Select haircut silhouettes that either soften or sharpen structure.
- Place contour/highlight with a measurable goal.
- Improve photo composition by favoring your most balanced angles.
Final note
Faces are naturally asymmetrical and beauty is broader than any formula. Use the omni face calculator as a planning tool, not a scorecard for self-worth. Your best result is confidence plus informed choices.