We’ve all heard the phrase at some point. “Men like short women.”
It’s usually said casually, sometimes jokingly, sometimes as if it were an undeniable truth. But is it really that simple?

A recent study has quietly revived the discussion, suggesting that reality is far more subtle than this familiar cliché.

When researchers put attraction under the microscope

A study published in Frontiers in Psychology explored a deceptively simple question. Does height actually influence romantic preference?

To investigate, researchers surveyed more than 500 participants from multiple countries. The method was intentionally stripped down. Volunteers were shown silhouettes of varying heights and asked to select their ideal partner size depending on the type of relationship they had in mind.

No faces. No fashion cues. No personality traits. Just height.

What emerged from those minimalist choices turned out to be surprisingly revealing.

What the results really showed

On average, men tended to prefer women slightly shorter than the typical female height in their own country. Women, meanwhile, leaned toward men slightly taller than the national male average.

At first glance, nothing particularly shocking.

But the more interesting patterns appeared when researchers separated preferences by relationship type. Men showed a stronger preference for shorter partners when considering short-term relationships. That difference became less pronounced when participants imagined long-term, committed partnerships.

In other words, height seemed to influence attraction, but not uniformly. Context mattered.

Why similarity often wins

Another notable finding involved tall participants. Individuals who were taller than average frequently preferred partners who were also tall.

This tendency is known as homogamy. The concept refers to the human inclination to choose partners who resemble us in certain ways, whether in physical traits, background, or lifestyle.

Rather than pointing to a universal rule, this highlights something more personal. Preferences are often shaped by how we see ourselves.

Biology, culture, and expectations

Why does height carry such symbolic weight in dating and attraction?