What are hunter eyes?
Hunter eyes describe a particular configuration of the eye area: deep-set eyes, a degree of hooding over the upper lid, and — the defining feature — a positive canthal tilt, where the outer corner of the eye sits higher than the inner corner. The combination narrows the visible eye opening from above and angles it upward, producing the intense, focused gaze the looksmaxxing community nicknamed “hunter eyes.” The opposite look — large, rounder eyes with a neutral or negative tilt — is often called “prey eyes.”
Canthal tilt, explained
Canthal tilt is the angle between the inner corner of the eye (the medial canthus) and the outer corner (the lateral canthus). Draw a line from one to the other and measure how it tips. A positive tilt means the outer corner rides higher than the inner one; a neutral tilt is roughly level; a negative tilt drops the outer corner below the inner one. Hunter eyes lean on a positive canthal tilt, which is why measuring the angle is the fastest way to see where your own eye area lands on the spectrum.
Why looksmaxxing loves the hunter-eye look
Within looksmaxxing, hunter eyes have become shorthand for a masculine, composed, slightly predatory presence. A positive canthal tilt and supportive bone structure under the eye tend to read as confidence and self-assurance, so the trait gets traded around forums and timelines as an aesthetic goal. It helps that the hunter-eye look is easy to spot in a photo — once you know to look for the upward angle of the outer corner, you start seeing it everywhere. That visibility is exactly what turned canthal tilt into one of the community's favorite talking points.
Hunter eyes, harmony, and attractiveness
A positive canthal tilt can absolutely sharpen the eye area, but no single feature carries a whole face. Attractiveness lives in harmony — how the eyes relate to the brow, the midface, the cheekbones, and the jaw. Hunter eyes that sit on a balanced, proportional face read as striking; the same tilt on a face fighting other imbalances does far less. Many genuinely magnetic faces carry a neutral or even negative tilt and look completely right. Treat the hunter-eye ideal as one data point about your geometry, not a verdict on your looks.
How to check your own canthal tilt
You don't need a protractor and a mirror. Upload a clear, front-facing photo into the analyzer above and our AI maps the landmarks around each eye, estimates your canthal tilt, and places your eye area in context with the rest of your face. It takes about a minute, and it works entirely from the photo you provide. Think of it as a fun, honest read on whether your eyes lean toward the hunter end of the scale — a starting point for self-reflection, never a clinical or diagnostic measurement.