Find your perfect glove size from hand measurements. Converts between US, EU, and international sizing for work, winter, and medical gloves.
Gloves that don't fit properly compromise dexterity, warmth, and protection. This glove size calculator takes your hand circumference and length measurements to determine the ideal glove size across US alpha sizing (XS–XXL), numeric sizing (6–12), and EU standards. The goal is to make the fit closer to a real hand than the label on the package.
The key measurement is hand circumference — wrap a tape measure around your dominant hand at the widest part of your palm (excluding the thumb), make a loose fist, and read the measurement. Hand length from wrist crease to middle fingertip is the secondary measurement for borderline cases.
Different glove types have different fit requirements. Work gloves need room for dexterity, medical gloves must be snug for tactile sensitivity, winter gloves benefit from slight room for air insulation, and fashion leather gloves fit best when skin-tight. This calculator accounts for these differences and recommends sizes for each glove category, with material stretch factors and brand comparison charts.
Poorly fitting gloves reduce grip, warmth, and safety. This calculator uses the main hand measurements directly instead of relying on vague size labels, which makes the recommendation much easier to trust.
It is useful because glove fit changes with the category. Work, winter, medical, and leather gloves do not all want the same amount of room, so the type-specific recommendation is more practical than a generic size chart alone.
Glove Size (numeric) = hand circumference (inches). US alpha: <7" = XS, 7–7.5" = S, 7.5–8.5" = M, 8.5–9.5" = L, 9.5–10.5" = XL, 10.5"+ = XXL. EU size = circumference in cm (rounded to nearest 0.5).
Result: Size M–L (US 8.5 / EU 21.5)
8.5" circumference falls at the M/L boundary. For work gloves, sizing up to L provides better dexterity. EU size = 8.5 × 2.54 ≈ 21.5 cm.
The most common system uses hand circumference in inches as the numeric size (so 8" circumference = size 8). US alpha sizes (S, M, L) overlay this with broad ranges. European sizes use centimeters. Japanese sizes run 1–2 sizes smaller than US equivalents.
Leather gloves, especially those made from lambskin or deerskin, will stretch considerably with use. Buy them snug. Synthetic materials like Gore-Tex, neoprene, and nylon have minimal stretch — buy your exact size or slightly larger. Knit gloves and fleece are the most forgiving due to inherent elasticity.
Medical examination gloves should fit like a second skin — snug enough to feel textures through the glove. Motorcycle gloves need wrist room for controls. Ski gloves should accommodate layering with liner gloves underneath. Work gloves for tools need enough room to grip without bunching at the fingertips.
Wrap a flexible tape measure around your dominant hand at the widest part of the palm (knuckles), excluding the thumb. Make a loose fist and read the measurement. This is the primary sizing metric.
Measure your dominant hand — it's usually slightly larger. If both hands are the same size, use either. Many people have a half-size difference between hands.
Choose the larger size for work and winter gloves. Choose the smaller size for medical and fashion gloves. The fit should match the glove's intended use, not just the number on the label.
Yes, significantly. Japanese and Korean brands run smaller, European brands are generally true to numeric sizing, and American work glove brands tend to run slightly large.
Leather stretches 5–10% with wear. Synthetic materials like nylon and neoprene have minimal stretch. Knit gloves are the most forgiving. Factor in stretch when choosing between sizes.
Medical gloves use the same S/M/L/XL system but fit much more snugly. A person who wears L in winter gloves might wear M in nitrile exam gloves.