What Studies on Male Mate Preferences Actually Reveal
37 cultures. 45 countries. Over 23,000 people. The data says the same thing.
There is a narrative that gets trotted out every time someone says something true about what men actually want.
It goes like this:
“Actually, studies show that successful, educated men prefer educated, career-driven women who are their equals. The research supports relationship parity. Men with options choose partners of similar status and achievement. The patriarchal fantasy of the young, beautiful, traditionally feminine woman is just that - a fantasy held by men who can’t compete.”
I have heard this claim enough times that I decided to go find the research it supposedly comes from. There are two different bodies of literature, and the gap between them is one of the more instructive examples of institutional narrative-building I have ever seen.
Let me show you what the data actually says.
I covered the research on female preferences years ago. Today we’re looking at the other side of the equation.
The Study That Should End the Conversation
In 1990, David Buss and colleagues published the results of one of the most ambitious cross-cultural studies ever conducted in evolutionary psychology. Across 37 cultures and 9,474 people - every inhabited continent, every major cultural tradition, rich countries and poor ones, Western and Eastern - they measured what men and women actually said they valued in a long-term mate.
The finding was not subtle.
Men, across all 37 cultures, consistently placed more value on physical attractiveness and youth in a partner than women did. Women, across every single one of those 37 cultures without exception, placed significantly more value on earning capacity, financial prospects, ambition, and status in a partner than men did.
Not in some cultures. Not in Western cultures. Not in cultures with traditional gender norms. In all 37 of them.
This finding has been replicated more times than almost any other result in human behavioral science. In 2020, Walter, Conroy-Beam, Buss and colleagues ran it again - 45 countries this time, 14,399 people. Same result. Men preferred younger, physically attractive mates. Women preferred older men with financial prospects.
Across 45 countries. Across 14,399 people. The same finding.
This is not Richard Cooper talking. This is the Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology and Psychological Science. This is peer-reviewed science that has been replicated across decades and continents with sample sizes that dwarf almost everything else in the behavioral literature.
I have been saying it in my books since the first edition. In The Unplugged Alpha:
“Men view women as beauty objects; women view men as success objects.”
The research did not get the memo that this was supposed to be a controversial opinion.
Where the “Equal Partners” Narrative Actually Comes From
Here is the honest version of what the data shows - and why it gets misread.
Educated people do tend to marry other educated people. This pattern is called educational homogamy, and it is real and well-documented. The mistake is treating it as evidence of preference. It is not. It is evidence of opportunity.
Stauder and Kossow (2021), published in the Journal of Family Issues, analyzed the German Socio-Economic Panel - one of the most rigorous longitudinal household datasets in the world. Their finding: educational homogamy is driven primarily by partner-market opportunity structure. The availability and density of similarly educated partners in your social environment explains the pattern far more than stated preferences alone.
In plain language: wealthy, educated men end up with educated women because they meet them in the same places - the same universities, the same professional environments, the same social circles. That is not the same thing as choosing them for their education. That is geography and social proximity disguised as preference data.
A wealthy man who meets a beautiful, feminine woman with no college degree at a mutual friend’s event will not pass on her because she lacks credentials. The research says he will respond to her attractiveness. What the homogamy data tells you is where he is most likely to meet people - not what happens when he does.
The Finding That Kills the Narrative Entirely
Fales, Frederick and colleagues (2016), published in Personality and Individual Differences using two large national studies, measured whether income and education level changed what men prioritized in a partner.
The narrative predicts that higher-income, more educated men would place more weight on credentials, career, and status parity in their selection.
The data found the opposite.
Higher-income men reported stronger preferences for physically attractive partners. More educated men emphasized looks more strongly.
Read that again. The more successful the man, the more he prioritized physical attractiveness. Not less. More.
This is exactly what you would predict from the evolutionary framework. Men with more options - men whose elevated status and resources give them access to a wider range of potential partners - use those options to select for the things they actually value. When a man cannot be selective, he takes what is available. When a man can be selective, he selects. And what the research shows, across 37 cultures and 45 countries, is what men actually value when they have the luxury of choosing.
I wrote it in The Top Shelf Man:
“Men inherently don’t want to wait longer or pay more for something that was given away immediately for less to another man.”
The top shelf man does not lower his standards as he rises. He raises them. The research confirms this is not an attitude. It is a pattern.
What Men Say vs. What Men Do
There is a body of research that complicates the clean story, and I want to address it directly rather than pretend it does not exist.
Eastwick and Finkel (2008), published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, ran a series of speed dating studies and found that stated preferences - what people say they want in a survey - predicted their actual real-time choices poorly. In the moment, both men and women responded more similarly to attractiveness than their survey responses suggested.
This finding gets used to argue that men do not actually prioritize physical attractiveness more than women do in real life. That reading is too aggressive. What Eastwick and Finkel actually showed is that stated preferences are an imperfect guide to real behavior, and that in the specific context of a short speed-dating interaction, the sex differences are smaller than surveys predict. This does not tell you that men do not prioritize attractiveness - it tells you that what people say on surveys does not perfectly predict what they do in a social situation. The Buss finding, using 9,474 people across 37 cultures, is the more robust evidence base. The Fales et al. finding, using self-reported preference data from national samples, tells you what successful men actually do when unconstrained.
The honest synthesis: men prioritize physical attractiveness and youth. The magnitude of this preference is larger in stated surveys than in some behavioral contexts, but the direction is consistent across every research methodology and every cultural context that has ever studied it. No study in the peer-reviewed literature shows men preferring educational credentials and career achievement over physical attractiveness in a partner at the population level.
The Asymmetry Nobody Wants to Say Out Loud
Here is what the combined literature actually shows, assembled honestly.
Women are beauty objects to men. Men are success objects to women.
“Women inherently primarily view men as success objects, and men primarily view women as beauty, and sex objects.” - The Top Shelf Man
This means the correct analysis of successful male preferences runs as follows. A high-value man - one who has built wealth, status, and the physique and presence that come from years of working on himself - arrives at the dating market with more options than average. He uses those options to select for what he has always valued: a woman who is physically attractive, feminine, younger, and oriented toward partnership rather than competition. The more resources he has, the more he can afford to hold this standard. The research confirms he does.
The women who benefit from the “successful men want educated equals” narrative are the ones who have spent their twenties building credentials while neglecting everything that the 23,000 people in the cross-cultural research consistently show men actually respond to. The narrative is not built on what the data shows. It is built on what a particular group of women needs the data to show.
“No woman wakes up in the morning dreaming of financially taking care of a man.” - The Top Shelf Man
And no man who has genuinely built himself into a high-value man wakes up dreaming of a partner who competes with him professionally, earns a comparable income, and frames the relationship as a negotiation between equals. The research says so. Experience says so. The revealed preferences of the most successful men in the world say so - look at who they date and marry when they have genuine options.
The data is the data.
In Conclusion
The “successful men want educated career women” narrative is not supported by the peer-reviewed research on male mate preferences. It is supported by educational homogamy data that reflects who successful people meet, not what they want when they meet them. The actual preference data - 37 cultures, 45 countries, over 23,000 people - is consistent and unambiguous: men prioritize physical attractiveness and youth. Successful men prioritize these things more, not less, than average men.
This is not a cultural artifact. It is a human pattern. It has been replicated across every culture and methodology that has ever studied it. The institutions that curate mainstream discourse on gender know this research exists. They choose not to discuss it.
You just read it.
The Cold, Hard Truth
Never forget:
Buss et al. (1990) studied 9,474 people across 37 cultures and found that men universally prioritized physical attractiveness and youth more than women did. Women universally prioritized earning capacity, status, and ambition more than men did. This is among the most replicated findings in behavioral science.
Walter, Conroy-Beam, Buss et al. (2020), replicated this in 45 countries with 14,399 people. Men preferred younger, attractive partners. Women preferred older men with financial prospects. Same finding. Bigger sample. More countries.
Fales, Frederick et al. (2016), published in Personality and Individual Differences, found that higher-income men reported stronger preferences for physically attractive partners, and more educated men emphasized looks more strongly. Successful men prioritize attractiveness more, not less, than average men.
Stauder and Kossow (2021) confirmed that educational homogamy - educated men marrying educated women - is driven primarily by partner-market opportunity structure, far more than stated preferences alone. Men end up with educated women because they meet them in the same places. That is not the same as choosing them for their education.
The “successful men want educated equals” narrative is not built on preference data. It is built on homogamy data misread as preference data, combined with social desirability bias in surveys. When men actually have options, the research shows what they do with them.
“Men view women as beauty objects; women view men as success objects.” This is not a controversial opinion. It is a finding replicated across 37 cultures, 45 countries, and over 23,000 people. The studies said it. Not me.
Peace.
The full framework for what high-value men actually build - and what they attract as a result - is in The Unplugged Alphaand The Top Shelf Man.
The School of Unplugging is where men doing this work gather.
Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.


Men like young attractive women? Can’t believe that research funds were allocated to that project lol
Great post. The feminist claim was obvious bunk. Yeah, educated, professional men will mostly meet those women. 🙄
Funniest of all, they try to use that particular strategy to debunk their most desperate threat: the passport Bros. Nothing gets them angrier than men traveling to traditional countries to find a beautiful traditional woman.😂