Lifetime earnings premium for above-average looking workers across occupations and education levels.
Hamermesh & Biddle, 1994 · American Economic Review
A personalised facial analysis and transformation plan, grounded in cephalometric research and tuned to your own definition of beauty.
As featured in
Reference design — sample editorial outlets, not endorsements.
From early readers
It flagged the midface volume loss I'd been chasing in three clinic mirrors — and the protocol it wrote me costs less than one syringe of filler.
The skin-texture read was the first one that didn't shame me into a peel. It told me which two products to drop and which actives to actually layer.
I came in fixated on my nose; the jawline-framing section reframed the whole face for me. I stopped wanting the rhinoplasty before I finished the report.
Pilot reviews — awaiting verified launch reviews
Not a single number. A structured analysis you can actually act on.
Every feature measured and explained — face shape, proportions, symmetry, skin, and each individual feature.
How you compare to your demographic average, and to the aesthetic preferences you set yourself.
Specific products and habits tiered to your budget — not vague advice, and never surgery by default.
Re-run your analysis over time and watch the numbers move with you.
Drag the handle on each frame. Two truths in a single image.

AfterBeforeReference illustration — verified-customer pairs at launch
Tiny shifts in cheek light, brow lift and the line of your jaw quietly change how confident you read in every photo. Your report shows you which of those shifts are already in reach — no surgery, no filters.

AfterBeforeReference illustration — verified-customer pairs at launch
The under-eye, the brow-tail, the canthal tilt — they decide if you read tired or rested before you say a word. Your report breaks down which periorbital signals you're sending and what to do about each one.

AfterBeforeReference illustration — verified-customer pairs at launch
Skin clarity, mid-face fullness and a clean light reflex do more for your face than any pose ever will. We tell you which of those three is dragging your reading down, and the cheapest realistic way to lift it.

AfterBeforeReference illustration — verified-customer pairs at launch
Your profile is the angle other people notice first and you almost never check. Clerva grades your nasal projection, chin support and neck line from the side and tells you which one moves your read the most.
468 landmarks, fifty cephalometric measurements, benchmarked against the people who actually look like you.
Built on objective measurement, demographic context, and privacy by design.
468 facial landmarks and 50+ cephalometric measurements — grounded in peer-reviewed research.
Khaleeji, Levantine, South Asian, East Asian, African and European faces are each benchmarked on their own — not against a generic global average.
Your photos stay between you and the model. They are never seen by a person, and you can delete them anytime in Settings.
Every recommendation carries its reasoning. We tell you what's worth changing — and what already works.
Built on the literature
You decide your nose, jaw or lips is the problem — usually after scrolling.
A meeting arranged around the procedure you've already half-chosen for yourself.
A ten-minute look in a mirror, no measurements, no demographic context, no second opinion.
Filler or surgery sold on the spot. The fixated feature changes; the whole face doesn't balance.
Every region scored together — proportions, symmetry, skin, and each feature, on the same canvas.
Cephalometric landmarks and angles benchmarked against the people who actually look like you.
Non-surgical, tuned to your face, your taste, and your budget — and tiered into morning and evening.
Re-run the analysis as your face changes. Watch the numbers move — refine the plan, never start from zero.
What a clinic charges $400–800 for. One-time payment, no subscription.
Pay once · Lifetime access.
Tap any question to expand.
Still unsure? Email us at support@clerva.cc
Decades of peer-reviewed research show facial aesthetics shape how the world treats you. Clerva measures the same traits these studies measured.
Lifetime earnings premium for above-average looking workers across occupations and education levels.
Hamermesh & Biddle, 1994 · American Economic Review
More likely to be hired on first interview when facial features score in the top quartile for symmetry and proportion.
Mobius & Rosenblat, 2006 · American Economic Review
Wage premium observed for attractive lawyers in private practice, controlling for school and class rank.
Biddle & Hamermesh, 1998 · Journal of Labor Economics
Most people have never seen their face described in evidence — only in opinions. Tonight, that changes.
No filters, no fake before-and-afters, no inflated scores. One read of the geometry that's actually yours, written for you alone.