What Manga Panels Confirm The Eren Yeager Height Canonically?

2025-11-04 18:13:36 284
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4 Answers

Addison
Addison
2025-11-05 20:27:07
I still replay the moment-by-moment scans in my head when I check heights. If you flip to the character profile pages at the back of the manga volumes, you get the short, official version: Eren is 170 cm before the time-skip and 183 cm after. Those pages are the primary source — the printed stats are what everyone cites.

Visually, look for panels where Eren is standing with his old squad in the training and recruit scenes; he matches Mikasa's height early on, which supports the 170 cm listing. Later panels, especially the ones where the Survey Corps stand in formation or when Eren faces other adult characters, show a noticeably taller frame that fits the 183 cm post-time-skip figure. For me, the combo of those profile pages and the matching panels seals the deal.
Kevin
Kevin
2025-11-08 08:36:17
I'm often lazy about catalogue trivia, but heights are one thing the manga spells out plainly. The canonical confirmation lives in the character profile pages printed in the collected 'Attack on Titan' volumes: Eren is listed as 170 cm before the time-skip and 183 cm afterwards. Those little databook-type pages are what you want.

If you prefer pictures, check panels where Eren stands next to his comrades in training photos or Corps formations — early panels show him roughly equal to Mikasa, later panels visibly taller than some of the squad, which matches the printed stats. It’s nice when the art and official notes line up; feels neat and tidy to me.
Theo
Theo
2025-11-09 08:09:29
My instinct is always to cross-reference art with the official databook pages, because the manga panels themselves rarely print numbers directly — the margins and extras do that work. The canonical confirmation comes from two things: the printed character profiles inside the tankobon volumes and the visual confirmation panels where Eren is positioned alongside named characters whose heights are also listed.

The profile pages explicitly put Eren at 170 cm at the start of the series and 183 cm after the time-skip; those are Isayama's figures. Then you can scan panels—training corps photos, regiment lineups, and several team-shot pages—where Eren's relative height compared to Mikasa, Armin, and Levi matches the official stats. If you're into more forensic fandom work, match the panels where Levi (160 cm in the profiles) stands next to Eren — the visual gap after the time-skip tracks with the numerical change. I personally find that mix of text and art very satisfying; it feels like the worldbuilding has real weight.
Stella
Stella
2025-11-09 12:26:00
I get a little giddy talking about this, because literal proof in manga Margins is the kind of nitpicky joy I live for.

If you want outright canonical confirmation, the clearest places are the official character profile pages printed inside the collected 'Attack on Titan' volumes. Those author-supplied stats list Eren's height explicitly: pre-time-skip he's listed at 170 cm, and after the time-skip he's listed at 183 cm. Those are the numbers fans quote because they're printed by the creator in the tankobon extras — so they're as canon as it gets.

Beyond the written stats, the panels that visually back those numbers up are the side-by-side comparison scenes. Early chapters show Eren next to Mikasa and Armin in the 104th Training Corps sequences where his head reaches roughly the same level as Mikasa's, matching the pre-time-skip stat. After the jump, panels of him standing beside older characters like Levi or during Survey Corps formations make his increased height obvious and consistent with the 183 cm listing. I love how Isayama uses layout and other characters' profiles to make those numbers feel believable.
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