Study Finds Women Rated More Attractive.
A major international study has found that women’s faces are consistently rated as more attractive than men’s faces, even by other women. Researchers say the finding confirms the existence of a global “gender attractiveness gap.”
Scientists analysed more than 1.5 million facial attractiveness ratings collected from 52 studies across 76 countries. The research included nearly 30,000 participants who rated around 17,000 faces from different cultures and age groups.
According to the study, female faces received higher attractiveness scores across almost every category. Researchers found that women themselves gave the highest ratings to other women, while male faces generally received lower ratings.
The study also discovered that the attractiveness gap becomes smaller with age. By around 80 years old, the difference between how male and female faces are perceived almost completely disappears.
Researchers believe facial structure may partly explain the results. On average, women tend to have rounder facial features, while men often have more rectangular face shapes. Both male and female participants showed a preference for rounder faces.
Charles Darwin previously argued that sexual selection shaped physical appearance differently across species. However, scientists continue debating why humans show such strong preferences for female facial features.
The research team, led by Eugen Wassiliwizky, says the findings appear across cultures and sexual orientations, suggesting the effect may extend beyond social or cultural influences.
Experts caution that the study does not fully explain why female faces are generally rated more attractive. However, researchers believe both biology and long-term evolutionary factors may contribute to the pattern.

