Triangle and pear face shapes usually look best in sunglasses that add lift and visual width near the brow while balancing a wider jaw. Start with soft cat-eye, brow-lifted, aviator, oval, or rimless styles that do not make the lower face look heavier.
A triangle or pear face shape usually has more width at the jawline than at the forehead. The goal is not to hide the jaw. The goal is to bring more balance to the upper half of the face so the sunglasses lift the eyes, open the forehead area, and keep the lower face from feeling visually heavy.
This guide is part of the BAPORSSA face shape sunglasses guide. If your forehead is wider than your chin, use the heart-shaped face sunglasses guide instead. If your cheekbones are the widest point, read the diamond face shape sunglasses guide. If your jawline is strong but your face is not narrower at the forehead, compare with the square face sunglasses guide.
Quick answer: what sunglasses suit triangle or pear face shapes?
The best sunglasses for triangle and pear face shapes are usually soft cat-eye, brow-lifted, aviator, oval, rimless, and softly oversized styles. These shapes add attention near the eyes and brow, which helps balance a wider jawline.
Best for: adding lift to the upper face, balancing a wider lower face, and avoiding a heavy frame effect around the jaw.
Avoid if: the frame is tiny, narrow, very bottom-heavy, or strongly downward-sloping. Those shapes can make the jaw look wider and the forehead look smaller.
How to tell if you have a triangle or pear face shape
A triangle face shape, also called a pear-shaped face, usually has a narrower forehead and a wider jawline. The cheekbone area may be moderate, but the lower face carries the most visual weight.

You may have a triangle or pear face shape if sunglasses with very small lenses make your jaw look stronger, if low or downward frames pull the face down, or if lifted frames make your face look more balanced immediately.
Do not confuse a triangle face with an inverted triangle face. An inverted triangle is closer to a heart-shaped face: wider forehead, narrower chin. A pear or triangle face is the opposite: narrower forehead, wider jaw.
Best sunglasses shapes for triangle and pear face shapes

| Frame shape | Best for | Why it works | BAPORSSA route |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soft cat-eye sunglasses | Adding lift and upper-face width | The upswept line draws attention upward and balances the jaw. | Refined Cat-Eye |
| Brow-lifted sunglasses | Balancing a narrower forehead | More visual presence at the top offsets a wider lower face. | Statement Frames |
| Aviator sunglasses | Soft coverage without harsh corners | The lens adds width near the eyes while softening the lower outline. | Driving & Travel |
| Oval sunglasses | Softening the face | Curved lenses reduce angular contrast around the jaw. | Rimless |
| Rimless lifted sunglasses | Lightweight balance | The lens can add shape without a heavy lower frame. | Rimless |
Soft cat-eye sunglasses
Soft cat-eye sunglasses are one of the strongest choices for triangle and pear face shapes. The lifted outer corners bring attention upward and outward, which helps balance a wider jawline.
The key is softness. A refined cat-eye works better than an exaggerated sharp wing. You want lift, not a heavy top corner that overwhelms the face.
BAPORSSA route: Start with Refined Cat-Eye when the goal is lift and upper-face balance.



Brow-lifted sunglasses
Brow-lifted sunglasses add more presence near the top of the face. This can help a triangle face because the forehead is usually narrower than the jawline.
Choose frames that feel lifted or wider at the upper edge, but avoid very heavy flat-top frames if they look harsh. The goal is balanced presence, not a blocky brow.
BAPORSSA route: Use Statement Frames when you need more visual weight near the eyes.

Aviator sunglasses
Aviators can work well for triangle and pear face shapes because they add width around the eyes and soften the vertical line of the face. They are usually easier than very small rectangular frames.
Avoid aviators that are too narrow or too droopy. A balanced aviator should lift the eyes and give enough width without pulling the face downward.
BAPORSSA route: Choose Driving & Travel for everyday coverage and soft balance.

Oval sunglasses
Oval sunglasses soften the face and avoid adding more hard lines around the jaw. They work best when the lens is not too small and the frame has enough width across the eyes.
For triangle faces, tiny oval lenses can under-balance the jaw. Medium oval or rounded-oval lenses are usually safer.
BAPORSSA route: Start with Rimless if you want a soft shape without heavy lower-frame weight.

Rimless lifted sunglasses
Rimless sunglasses can work for triangle and pear face shapes when the lens has enough width and a slightly lifted shape. The benefit is that the frame adds direction without creating a heavy border.
Avoid tiny rimless lenses that disappear on the face. You need enough shape to balance the jawline.
BAPORSSA route: Choose Rimless when you want lightness, lift, and less visual weight.



What triangle and pear face shapes should avoid
The main mistake is choosing sunglasses that make the lower face look heavier. Triangle and pear face shapes need more balance near the eyes and brow, not more weight near the jaw.
- Tiny frames: they can make the jaw look wider by comparison.
- Very narrow lenses: they do not add enough balance across the upper face.
- Bottom-heavy frames: they can pull attention toward the lower face.
- Downward-sloping shapes: they may make the face look dragged down.
- Flat, shallow rectangles: they can make the forehead look smaller and the jaw stronger.
The better rule: choose sunglasses with lift, upper-face presence, enough width, or a light rimless edge.
Fit details that matter more than triangle face shape
Triangle face shape helps you choose the visual direction. Fit still decides whether the sunglasses feel good, stay in place, and look intentional.

Frame width
The frame should usually be wide enough to balance the jawline without squeezing at the temples. If the frame is too narrow, the lower face can look stronger. If it is too wide, the sunglasses can slide or tilt.
If temple pressure is the real issue, read the wide face and anti-pinch guide and check Wide Fit / Anti-Pinch.
Lens height
Medium lens height is usually safest. Very shallow lenses may not balance the jaw. Very tall lenses can overwhelm a narrower forehead. A medium lens with lift usually works better.
Bridge fit
If sunglasses slide down, touch your cheeks, or leave nose marks, the issue may be bridge fit rather than face shape. Read the sliding sunglasses guide, the low bridge fit guide, or the silicone nose pads guide.
Triangle face vs nearby face shapes
| What you notice | Likely direction | Best next guide |
|---|---|---|
| Your jaw is wider than your forehead | Triangle or pear face shape | This guide |
| Your forehead is wider than your chin | Heart-shaped face or inverted triangle | Heart-shaped face sunglasses guide |
| Your cheekbones are the widest point | Diamond face shape | Diamond face shape sunglasses guide |
| Your jaw is strong but your forehead is not much narrower | Square face | Square face sunglasses guide |
| Your face is longer than it is wide | Oblong or long face | Oblong face sunglasses guide |
The BAPORSSA route for triangle and pear face shapes
- Add lift first: choose Refined Cat-Eye for soft upward balance.
- Add upper-face presence: choose Statement Frames when the forehead area needs more visual width.
- Add soft coverage: choose Driving & Travel for aviator-style balance.
- Keep it light: choose Rimless if thick frames feel too heavy.
For triangle and pear faces, the best sunglasses lift the eye area and balance the jaw without making the lower face look heavier.

FAQ
What shape sunglasses are best for triangle face shape?
Soft cat-eye, brow-lifted, aviator, oval, rimless, and softly oversized sunglasses are usually best for triangle face shapes because they add lift and balance a wider jawline.
What sunglasses are best for pear-shaped faces?
Pear-shaped faces usually look best in sunglasses that add width and attention near the brow. Soft cat-eye, aviator, oval, and lifted rimless styles are strong options.
Is triangle face shape the same as pear-shaped face?
In most eyewear advice, triangle and pear-shaped face are used for a similar proportion: narrower forehead and wider jawline. Inverted triangle is different and is closer to a heart-shaped face.
Are cat-eye sunglasses good for triangle faces?
Yes. Soft cat-eye sunglasses can work very well because the lifted outer corners balance a wider jaw and bring attention upward.
Are aviator sunglasses good for pear-shaped faces?
Yes, if they have enough width and do not look too droopy. Aviators can add soft coverage around the eyes and help balance the lower face.
What sunglasses should triangle faces avoid?
Triangle faces should be careful with tiny frames, very narrow lenses, bottom-heavy frames, downward-sloping shapes, and shallow rectangles.
What glasses look good on pear-shaped faces?
The same balance rule applies to glasses and sunglasses: pear-shaped faces usually look good in lifted, brow-balanced, oval, aviator-inspired, and softly upswept frames.
What should I read after this triangle face guide?
Read the main face shape sunglasses guide, or compare heart-shaped faces, diamond faces, square faces, round faces, and oblong faces.






