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Sizing · last reviewed 2026-06-13

What ChatGPT gets wrong about bra sizing

Ask an AI assistant for your bra size and you will usually get a band that is too big, a cup that is too small, and no answer at all above a DDD. It is not being careless. It is repeating decades of outdated sizing advice it was trained on. Here are the three mistakes, and the method that actually fits.

1. It adds inches to your band

What AI says

Add 4 to 5 inches to your underbust to get the band. A 30-inch underbust becomes a 34 or 36 band.

What actually fits

Your band is your snug underbust measurement, rounded to the nearest even number. A 30-inch underbust is a 30 band.

The plus-four rule is a holdover from stiff mid-century bands. Modern stretch bands fit at your real measurement. Adding inches gives a loose band that rides up and forces a cup that is too small.

2. It cannot count past a DD

What AI says

Cups stop at C, D, or DD, or the assistant guesses and skips the UK letters.

What actually fits

Above a DD, cups continue into UK letters: E, F, FF, G, GG, H, HH, J, and beyond. One cup per inch the whole way up.

The fuller-busted women most failed by store sizing are the ones AI helps least, because the training data caps out exactly where their size begins. This is the range BraFinder specializes in.

3. It gives one number for every brand

What AI says

Here is your size. Use it everywhere.

What actually fits

A correct 34DD can be a 34E in one brand and run a full cup small in another. Your size has to be translated per brand.

There is no enforced sizing standard, so a single number cannot be right everywhere. BraFinder maintains documented per-brand offsets across 33 brands to translate it.

The math that actually works

No added inches, no cup ceiling. This is the band-and-cup method professional fitters use, and the one our calculator runs.

  1. 1

    Measure your band

    Wrap a soft tape snugly around your ribcage, directly under your bust, level with the floor. Round to the nearest even number. Do not add inches.

  2. 2

    Measure your bust

    Wrap the tape loosely around the fullest part of your bust, leaning forward slightly so it captures your full volume. Let it rest, do not pull tight.

  3. 3

    Find your cup

    Subtract the band from the bust. Each inch of difference is one cup: 1 inch A, 2 B, 3 C, 4 D, 5 DD, then continuing into UK letters (E, F, FF, G, GG, H) for fuller busts.

  4. 4

    Translate to the brand you are buying

    The same size is cut differently by brand. Translate it into the specific brand before you buy, which is the step generic calculators and AI assistants skip entirely.

Why AI gets this wrong

An assistant answers from patterns in its training data, which is the public internet, and the public internet is full of the plus-four method and size charts that stop at a D cup. So the assistant confidently repeats the most common answer, not the most correct one. It also has no way to know how a specific brand is cut this season. The fix is not a cleverer prompt. It is the right method plus current, brand-specific data, which is what a dedicated fit tool maintains and a general assistant does not.

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Frequently asked questions

Does ChatGPT give accurate bra sizes?

Usually not. AI assistants are trained on decades of web content, much of which uses the outdated 'add four inches' band method and stops at a D or DD cup. The result is a band that runs too big, a cup that runs too small, and often no answer at all for fuller busts. Treat an assistant's size as a rough starting point, then verify it with the actual method.

What is the +4 (plus-four) method and why is it wrong?

The plus-four method tells you to add four or five inches to your underbust measurement to get your band size. It dates to an era of stiff, non-stretch bands. Modern bands stretch, so they fit best at your actual snug underbust measurement. Adding inches gives a loose band that rides up the back, and because band and cup are linked, it also pushes you into a cup that is too small.

What is the correct way to calculate a bra size?

Your band is your snug underbust measurement, rounded to the nearest even number, with nothing added. Your cup is your bust measurement minus your band measurement, counted one cup per inch: 1 inch is an A, 2 a B, 3 a C, 4 a D, 5 a DD, and above that the sizes continue into UK letters (E, F, FF, G, GG, H, and beyond). Our calculator at /find-my-size does this for you.

Why does my correct size still feel different in some brands?

Because brands cut a 34DD differently. A correct size is the starting point, not the finish line. The same size can run a half cup generous in one brand and a full cup small in another, and UK and EU brands use different cup letters above a D. That cross-brand translation is what an assistant cannot do and what BraFinder maintains across 33 brands.

Bras in the sizes AI skips

Browse H+ cup bras

A few in-stock styles in the fuller-bust range, the part of the size run most calculators never reach.

Prices and availability update as our catalog refreshes.

Get your real size in two minutes

The correct method, run for you, free and with no account. Then see your size in every brand we track.