Body Type Quiz for Women

Discover which women's body shape best matches your proportions, fit patterns, and silhouette with this supportive body type quiz.

Answer based on your usual proportions and clothing fit experiences, not on a single outfit or temporary change. This quiz is for self-reflection and styling reference only.

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1. When you look at your outline in a full-length mirror, what stands out most?

My shoulders and hips look balanced, and my waist is clearly defined.
My lower half looks fuller than my upper half, with a noticeable waist.
My middle looks fuller, and my waist is not the first thing I notice.
My shape looks fairly straight from shoulders to hips, with gentle definition.
My upper half looks broader than my hips, especially through the shoulders.

2. In fitted dresses, which pattern feels most familiar?

They usually follow my curves evenly and highlight my waist naturally.
They fit my hips first, while the top half often feels easier to fit.
They can feel snug through the bust or midsection before the hips do.
They often skim straight down without much waist shaping on their own.
They fit my shoulders or upper body first, while the hips stay easier.

3. How do button-down shirts usually fit across your upper body and waist?

I often want room for both bust and hips, but the waist still needs shaping.
The upper part is usually manageable, but the lower half can pull more.
The bust or middle area often decides the size more than my hips do.
They usually fit in a straightforward way without major waist shaping.
Shoulder width or upper-body structure usually sets the fit first.

4. When shopping for jeans or trousers, which issue shows up most often?

If the hips fit, I still notice the waist-to-hip curve strongly.
Finding enough room through hips and thighs is the main challenge.
My waist area often feels less defined than the rest of the fit.
The fit is usually fairly even from waist through hips and legs.
Lower-body fit is easier; I usually pay more attention to tops or jackets.

5. In photos, which proportion do you notice first?

An even bust-to-hip balance with a strong waistline.
A softer or fuller lower half compared with my shoulders.
More visual focus around my upper torso or waist area.
A straight, balanced line without one area dominating.
A broader-looking upper frame compared with my hips.

6. If you use a belt at your natural waist, what usually happens?

It quickly highlights a waist-to-hip curve that already looks balanced.
It helps define my waist while still leaving the lower half more prominent.
It helps a little, but my midsection still feels like the main visual area.
It creates some shape, but my overall line still reads pretty straight.
It adds definition, but my shoulders or upper body still read wider.

7. How do blazer or jacket shoulders usually feel?

If shoulders fit, I still want the jacket to shape around my waist and hips.
Shoulders often fit first, while the lower half feels like the bigger fit variable.
I think more about upper-body or midsection room than hip fit.
They usually sit fairly evenly, with a cleaner straight fit than a curvy one.
Shoulder structure is often the first thing I notice when the fit is off.

8. In a sleeveless top or tank, how does your upper body usually read?

Balanced with the rest of my shape, especially when my waist is visible.
Smaller or quieter compared with my hips and lower-body shape.
Fuller through the bust or torso than through the lower body.
Pretty even and straight, without a very curvy upper-body contrast.
Broader or more structured than my hips, especially at the shoulders.

9. Where do you most often notice fullness or curve in your silhouette?

Across bust and hips in a fairly even way, with a visible waist between them.
Mostly through hips, seat, or thighs rather than the upper body.
Around the waistline, upper torso, or bust area first.
I do not notice one area standing out much more than the others.
Across the shoulders, chest, or upper frame more than the hips.

10. How does a straight-cut dress usually hang on your frame?

It hides some of my natural waist shape unless I add definition.
It can skim my upper half but feels more shaped by my hips below.
It often works better than heavily cinched styles around the waist.
It often suits me because my outline already looks fairly straight.
It tends to read better on my lower half than on my upper frame.

11. When your weight shifts a little, where does the change usually show first?

I notice it in both bust and hips while my waist still stays visible.
Mostly in my hips, seat, or thighs before my upper body.
Usually around my middle, waistline, or upper torso area.
It spreads fairly evenly, without one zone changing much more than others.
I notice it more across my upper body than through the hips.

12. Which statement sounds most like your lower-half fit experience?

My hips are balanced with the rest of me, but tailored waist shaping still matters.
My hips and thighs are usually the area I fit around first.
My lower half is not usually the area that drives fit challenges.
My lower half tends to look balanced and fairly straight rather than curvy.
My lower half is usually easier to fit than my upper half.

13. Which statement sounds most like your top fit experience?

I usually want room for bust and shape for the waist at the same time.
Tops are generally simpler to fit than skirts, jeans, or dresses.
I think about bust or torso room more than hip balance when choosing tops.
Straight or simple top cuts usually work without much adjustment.
Necklines, shoulder seams, or upper-body width matter most for fit.

14. In a wrap dress, what shape usually appears?

It usually works naturally because it follows my balanced curves and waist.
It helps define my waist while still keeping my lower half more visible.
It can help, but the middle still feels like my strongest shape zone.
It adds some line and softness, but my shape still reads fairly straight.
It defines the waist, but my upper frame still reads strongest overall.

15. How does a tucked-in top usually change your silhouette?

It makes my waist stand out even more between balanced bust and hips.
It highlights my waist, but my hips still remain the fuller feature.
It does not create a strong waist effect unless the cut is very strategic.
It gives a cleaner line, but my shape still looks relatively straight.
It adds shape, but my upper body still looks more dominant than my hips.

16. When a brand says 'balanced fit,' how does it usually feel on you?

Balanced can work, but I still notice I need room for curves and waist shaping.
It may fit my upper half, but the lower half needs more consideration.
It can feel better through the hips than through my bust or middle.
It often feels close to my natural proportions because nothing dominates strongly.
It often feels tighter up top than below because of my upper frame.

17. In swimwear, which fit challenge is most familiar?

I want support and shape that works for both bust and hips together.
Bottom fit and lower-half balance usually need the most attention.
I pay more attention to the midsection or bust than to hip fit.
I usually look for simple cuts that add shape to a straighter line.
Top support or upper-body fit is usually more important than bottom fit.

18. From the side, which outline feels most accurate?

A defined waist between a fuller bust and hip line.
A quieter upper half with more shape through the hips and seat.
More fullness around the torso than a strongly narrowed waistline.
A fairly straight line with moderate structure and less dramatic curve.
A stronger upper frame leading into a narrower lower half.

19. Which compliment sounds most familiar when people describe your shape?

'Your proportions look very balanced and naturally curvy.'
'You have a softly curvy lower half and a defined waist.'
'You carry presence through your upper body and middle.'
'You look streamlined, even, and easy to dress.'
'You have strong shoulders or a striking upper frame.'

20. Which shopping shortcut usually works best for you?

Choosing pieces that follow curves and define the waist almost always helps.
Balancing the lower half with structure or detail on top works best.
Styles that create vertical flow away from the middle usually feel easiest.
Simple cuts that add shape or texture to a balanced straight line work well.
Softening or balancing the upper frame usually makes outfits feel right.

21. If you had to summarize your proportions in one phrase, which fits best?

Balanced curves with a clearly defined waist.
More volume below the waist than above it.
More fullness through the middle or upper torso than through the hips.
Straight, balanced proportions with softer waist definition.
A stronger upper frame with narrower hips below.