A 2025 conjoint analysis of nearly 5,400 swiping decisions found that physical attractiveness determined initial selection more than any other variable. A 1-standard-deviation increase in attractiveness boosted a profile’s selection rate by roughly 20%. The same increase in intelligence improved it by 2%. The study, published in an online dating research context, controlled for bio quality, job status, height, and shared interests. Looks dominated at the point of first contact, and no other factor came close.
That finding is consistent with decades of attraction research, but it tells only part of the story. Attraction at first glance and attraction over time operate on different mechanisms. The factors that get someone’s attention and the factors that sustain a relationship overlap, but they are not the same list.
Symmetry and What It Signals
Facial symmetry has been studied extensively as a predictor of attractiveness. The research shows that symmetrical faces are rated as more attractive across cultures, age groups, and even by infants. The explanation from evolutionary psychology is that symmetry signals developmental stability. A face that grew without disruption from disease, malnutrition, or environmental stress tends to be more symmetrical. The brain reads that symmetry as a marker of health, and health registers as attractive.
The effect is measurable but not overwhelming. A person with average features arranged symmetrically is typically rated higher than a person with individually strong features arranged asymmetrically. The research does not suggest that symmetry is the only thing that matters. It suggests that the brain uses it as a heuristic, a fast filter applied before slower assessments of personality or behavior have time to form.
Voice Pitch and Subconscious Filtering
Lower-pitched voices in men and higher-pitched voices in women are rated as more attractive in controlled studies. The effect holds across languages and cultures. Lower male voices correlate with higher testosterone levels, which the brain associates with physical strength and dominance. Higher female voices correlate with estrogen levels and perceived youth.
These preferences operate below conscious awareness. People do not decide to prefer a lower voice. They respond to it involuntarily, the same way they respond to symmetry or scent. Voice pitch is one of the fastest social signals the brain processes, faster than facial features and faster than speech content.
The Pheromone Question
The role of pheromones in human attraction is less settled than popular science suggests. Humans do produce chemical signals through sweat, and research has shown that women rate the body odor of men with dissimilar immune-system genes as more pleasant. That finding, from the well-known “sweaty T-shirt study,” suggests a mechanism for assessing genetic compatibility through scent.
However, humans lack a fully functional vomeronasal organ, which other mammals use to detect pheromones. The research on human pheromones is suggestive rather than conclusive. Scent matters in attraction, but calling it pheromone-driven overstates what the evidence supports.
Behavior Changes Attractiveness More Than People Expect
A 2024 study found that people who engage in prosocial behavior, such as offering emotional support, cooperating, or providing comfort, are rated as more physically attractive than baseline. The effect is not small. Participants rated the same faces as meaningfully more attractive when told the person had acted in a caring way toward someone else.
A separate finding from 2025 showed that willingness to protect is a strong predictor of attractiveness. For both men and women evaluating potential partners, a refusal to protect served as a penalty severe enough to function as a dealbreaker, regardless of how physically attractive the person was. The researchers described it as a threshold trait, one where falling below a minimum eliminates someone from consideration entirely.
The Matching Hypothesis
People tend to form relationships with partners who are similar to them in attractiveness, education, income, and values. This is called assortative mating, and the evidence for it is strong across large population studies. The idea that opposites attract is a cultural belief that does not hold up in the data. People pair with people who are similar, and they do so with enough consistency that researchers can predict relationship formation based on similarity metrics alone.
This does not mean people are consciously seeking mirrors. The mechanism is partly practical. People who move in the same social circles, attend the same schools, and frequent the same places are more likely to meet. Similarity in values and lifestyle is a byproduct of proximity. But it also reflects a psychological preference. People feel more comfortable with partners who confirm their view of themselves.
Attractiveness is also partially about context. Someone looking to meet a rich guy may prioritize financial stability and lifestyle compatibility over raw physical attraction, and the research shows that contextual preferences like these are entirely rational, not a departure from the “rules” of attraction but an extension of assortative mating principles applied to specific life goals.
What Actually Predicts Long-Term Attraction
Initial attraction is driven by appearance, voice, and rapid subconscious filtering. Long-term attraction is driven by reliability, emotional responsiveness, and shared experience. The two systems coexist, but the second one matters more for relationship survival.
Research from the Gottman Institute, which has studied couples for over 4 decades, identifies emotional responsiveness as the single strongest predictor of relationship longevity. A partner who turns toward bids for connection rather than away from them builds trust that physical attractiveness cannot replicate. The initial spark gets people into the room. What keeps them there is different.
The Gap Between What People Say and What They Do
Studies consistently show a disconnect between stated preferences and actual behavior. People say they value kindness, humor, and intelligence when asked what they want in a partner. When observed in speed dating or app contexts, they choose based on physical attractiveness first and evaluate those other traits only after passing the visual filter.
This gap is not hypocrisy. It is the difference between reflective preference and behavioral response. The brain processes visual information faster than personality information. In any setting where initial decisions are made quickly, appearance wins. In settings where people interact over time, personality catches up and often overtakes appearance as the primary driver of attraction.
The practical implication is that the “rules” of attraction are not a single set of fixed criteria. They are a sequence. Stage 1 is fast, visual, and largely unconscious. Stage 2 is slower, behavioral, and partially deliberate. Stage 3 is relational, built on shared history and emotional investment. Each stage has its own rules, and optimizing for one does not guarantee success in the others.
A person who photographs well but cannot hold a conversation will pass Stage 1 and fail Stage 2. A person who is reliably kind but physically unremarkable may struggle at Stage 1 in app-based contexts but succeed in face-to-face settings where personality has time to register. The science does not say one factor matters and the others do not. It says all of them matter, in sequence, weighted differently at each point.

