Teens (13–17) · Free AI Face Score

Teen Attractiveness Test (2026)

Most teens already know phone-camera photos are unfair. Bad lighting, weird angle, harsh selfie ring-light — none of it is your face. The teen attractiveness test gives you a private number for the photo itself so you can stop comparing your worst shot to other people's best one. The model runs in your browser, nothing is uploaded, and the result is for you to see — not to share, not to post, not to gatekeep against. It is a photo coach, not a verdict.

38,000+ faces analyzed · 100% private · Photos never uploaded

The 17 metrics — what matters most for teens

The same 17-metric scoring engine runs across every attractiveness-test variant on RealSmile — symmetry, FWHR, midface ratio, canthal tilt, jawline definition, eye spacing, philtrum-to-chin ratio, lip-fullness, smile authenticity, eye warmth, skin quality, and more. The audience-specific weighting below explains which of those metrics carry extra weight for teens (13–17) and why.

Photo Lighting Quality

For teen photos, lighting alone explains roughly 30% of score variance in the dataset. Phone cameras under harsh overhead light or yellow indoor bulbs flatten everything. Soft natural daylight near a window is the single biggest lift available.

Smile Authenticity

A genuine smile — even a small one — reads warmer than a forced one. The test is not asking you to grin; it just registers when the eye-crinkle muscles are engaged versus when only the mouth corners move.

Camera Angle

Photos taken from below the chin exaggerate nostrils and shorten the lower face. The metric measures camera tilt versus eye plane — eye-level shots score better, with no makeup, posture work, or feature change required.

Symmetry

Symmetry readings are heavily affected by head tilt, not by your actual face. A 15° head tilt at the moment the shutter clicks can drop the symmetry score 8–10 points on the same person.

Skin Tone Uniformity

The metric reads texture and tone — not perfection. It is designed to flag photo-rendering issues like over-sharpened phone filters or harsh ring-light shadowing, both of which suppress the score for reasons unrelated to your skin.

⚡ Premium AI Dating Photo Audit

Want feedback on the photo, not the face?

The free score is enough for most teens. If you want a deeper look at lighting and angle across multiple photos, the photo audit gives you a 5-page plan focused on photo improvement — not on evaluation. Optional and not necessary to use this page.

✓ 5-page personalized PDF · ✓ 21 metrics · ✓ Identity-locked AI glow-up preview · ✓ 7-day refund

What each score band means for teens

The audit returns a 0–100 score broken into four bands. Bands mean different things depending on audience — here is what each tier typically reflects when the photo is scored for teens.

Top band85–100

Top-band teen photos almost always reflect great lighting and a relaxed expression. This is a photo to keep — not because of the number, but because it captures you accurately under good conditions.

High band70–84

High-band teen photos usually have one fixable thing — most often a forced smile or a slight downward camera angle. The number is not telling you anything is wrong with your face. It is telling you the photo can be improved.

Mid band50–69

Mid-band teen photos are almost entirely a lighting and angle story. Phone-camera autoexposure handles bright outdoor light well and indoor light poorly. Try the same shot near a window and see how much the number changes — it will surprise you.

Low band0–49

Low-band teen photos are about the photo, not you. Acne in harsh ring-light, a hoodie shadow on the eyes, a tilted head, an upward chin angle — any of these can collapse a score. The audit retake guidance is the actually useful output here, not the number.

Teen attractiveness test — FAQ

Is this attractiveness test okay for teens to use?+
It is built so the focus is on the photo, not the person. The model runs entirely in your browser — nothing is uploaded, nothing is shared, no account is created. The result is private. We do not recommend treating any single number as a measure of self-worth, and the page focuses on improving the photo (lighting, angle, expression) rather than evaluating the face. If you find single-number tests upsetting, please skip this one.
Will my photo be saved or shown to anyone?+
No. The teen attractiveness test runs entirely client-side via TensorFlow.js — your photo never leaves your device. There is no upload, no server log, no human review, no shared database. You can verify this by opening your browser network tab during the scan; you will see no upload request. RealSmile never sees your photo.
What should I actually do with the score?+
Treat it as photo feedback, not a personal rating. The most useful output is the per-metric breakdown — it tells you whether the camera angle, the lighting, the expression, or the framing is the weakest link. Most low scores trace to lighting and angle, both of which you can fix in 30 seconds at a window.
What does the test NOT tell me?+
It does not tell you anything about your worth. It does not recommend cosmetic procedures, surgery, or any kind of "looksmaxxing" intervention. It scores the photo. Anyone — at any score — can take a better photo by improving lighting and expression. That is the entire premise.
Can my parents see what I uploaded?+
Only if the photo is saved on the device they share with you. We do not save, transmit, or store any photo. Nothing leaves your browser. We do not have an account system, an email gate, or a paywall on the free attractiveness test. If a parent or guardian wants to review the page itself, they can — there is nothing else to see.

Related tests & tools

⚡ Premium AI Dating Photo Audit

Treat it as photo feedback. That is the point.

The most useful output is the per-metric breakdown — angle, lighting, expression. Try the same photo near a window and see how much changes without any change to you.

✓ 5-page personalized PDF · ✓ 21 metrics · ✓ Identity-locked AI glow-up preview · ✓ 7-day refund

Other attractiveness-test variants