VTVictoria Tower
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Wardrobe & fit

Do your clothes make you more attractive?

Clothing fit and dress quality measurably raise men's perceived status and attractiveness, with effects that are fast and hard to override. In Howlett et al. (2013), 274 raters viewed faceless 5-second images of the same man in a bespoke vs off-the-peg suit (differing only in minor fit details) and rated him more positively on confidence, success, salary and flexibility in the tailored version on every dimension except trustworthiness. A 2023 review (Hester and Hehman) argues dress is a fundamental component of person perception, citing evidence that richer clothing is read as more competent automatically, even at 129ms exposure and when raters are told to ignore clothing (the underlying experiment is Oh et al., 2020). Survey data on suits vs casual is directionally consistent but smaller in magnitude and comes from a tailoring brand's own marketing survey, with men rated about 6% more attractive in a suit on average, up to about 12% by younger women (18-38).

How it factors into your fit: Reward good fit and dress quality as a moderate, reliable booster where well-fitted beats ill-fitting on status and attractiveness, with diminishing returns past well-fitted-and-appropriate; bespoke beats off-the-rack only marginally on attractiveness (single-digit percent) but more on status perception.

Evidence & sources