Aks Kos Irani [POPULAR × 2025]
For women, this is the most stressful part. The Rou-sari (headscarf) must cover the entire hair, the ears, and the neck. Not a single stray curl is allowed. However, the scarf cannot cast a shadow on the forehead or cheeks. And the scarf must be dark (usually black or dark brown), but not so dark that it merges with the background. The result? A strange, floating head phenomenon. Because the background is also white, and the scarf is black, the photo looks like a disembodied face with a slice of darkness where the hair should be.
Unlike the standard full-frontal "mugshot" style of US or UK passports, Iran requires a specific 3/4 profile . But not just any 3/4 profile. Your face must be turned exactly 45 degrees to the right. Not 44, not 46. You must look toward your right shoulder, but your eyes must look straight into the lens. This creates a biological impossibility: Your head is sideways, but your eyeballs are facing forward. It produces a look of extreme suspicion, as if you are trying to watch a thief while pretending to look at a beautiful sunset. aks kos irani
We are talking about the – the Iranian passport photo. For women, this is the most stressful part
Smiling is a crime. Frowning is a crime. Showing teeth is a federal offense. Your mouth must be closed. Your eyebrows must be relaxed. Your eyes must be open, but not wide. You must look like you have just been told that your flight is delayed by 12 hours, but you are trying to be polite about it. However, the scarf cannot cast a shadow on
The Iranian passport photo is governed by three merciless pillars that no other country seems to enforce with such digital precision.
So next time you see an Iranian passport, don't laugh at the photo. Salute it. That person suffered for that image. They turned their head 45 degrees into the wind of bureaucracy, looked straight into the eye of resistance, and didn't smile.
To the outside world, a passport photo is a bureaucratic annoyance. You stand against a wall, someone clicks a flash, and you move on. But in Iran, the Aks Kos (literally "Passport Photo," though Kos in this context is shorthand for Koshr meaning "corner" or "profile" in older bureaucratic terms, not the slang you might be thinking of) is a rite of passage. It is a gauntlet of geometry, religion, and patience.