Journalists rank America’s 10 hottest presidents — Trump left out

Staff Writer
Franklin D. Roosevelt and Barack Obama. (File photos)

America is celebrating its 250th birthday, so naturally it’s time to revisit one of the nation’s most important unresolved debates: Who was the hottest president in U.S. history?

Thankfully, the brave souls at BuzzFeed already did the heavy lifting, ranking America’s commanders in chief based purely on looks. No politics. No accomplishments. Just old-fashioned, deeply subjective historical thirst.

There were only two rules. First, the president had to have lived during the age of photography. Sorry, George Washington—you’ll have to settle for currency and fan edits.

Second, politics were completely off-limits. Some of these presidents ran the country well. Others ran it into the ground. None of that matters here. This is strictly about charisma, facial structure, and whatever mysterious quality makes someone look inexplicably photogenic 100 years later.

Let’s begin.

10. Warren G. Harding (1921–1923)

Warren G. Harding
Young Warren G. Harding in a formal suit and oversized bow tie, followed by a profile portrait in tailored attire, and a later formal presidential-era image showing how sharply his look evolved over time. (Photos: Library of Congress; Hulton Archive; Bettmann Archive)

Harding opens the list thanks to one key advantage: young Warren G. Harding looked nothing like the older version history textbooks committed to memory.

At 21, he had sharp features, a steady gaze, and mustache energy strong enough to outclass half of modern grooming trends.

Time, unfortunately, did what time does. But early Harding? Undeniably elite.

9. George H.W. Bush (1989-1993)

George H.W. Bush
George H.W. Bush aboard a boat during his public service years, an office shot capturing his famously direct “wrap this meeting up” energy, and a young Navy portrait showing his clean-cut, future-president vibe. (Photos: Arthur Schatz; WWD; Historical archive)

George H. W. Bush earns his spot on pure vibe alone. He perfected the “I have somewhere important to be” expression decades before it became a personality type.

Effortless, composed, slightly intimidating in a polite way—classic Bush energy.

8. Calvin Coolidge (1923–1929)

Calvin Coolidge
A young Calvin Coolidge in formal Victorian-era attire, a rare bowler-hat portrait with cane in hand, and an early formal image that reinforces his quiet, understated confidence. (Photos: Bettmann Archive; Public Domain; Historical archive)

Calvin Coolidge is not usually the answer people give in a “hottest presidents” debate.

That might be a mistake. There’s a quiet, almost modern-looking confidence to him that shouldn’t work—but absolutely does.

He looks like he’d say three words a decade—and somehow still win the room.

7. Herbert Hoover (1929–1933)

Herbert Hoover
A young Herbert Hoover in a wide-brimmed hat and suit, a mining-engineer portrait in his signature field attire, and a formal top-hat look that gives unexpected movie-star energy. (Photos: Hulton Archive; Public Domain; Historical archive)

Herbert Hoover suffers from Great Depression association—but visually? Different story.

He gives unexpected black-and-white film protagonist energy. Somehow looks like he should be both fixing economies and starring in silent films.

6. Ronald Reagan (1981–1989)

Ronald Reagan
Ronald Reagan showcasing his Hollywood-era charisma, and a horseback riding photo that cements his leading-man image. (Photos: National Archives; Reagan Library; Bettmann Archive)

Ronald Reagan makes the list by defaulting to Hollywood-level charisma.

Because that’s exactly what happened. Every photo looks like it came from a movie poster budget that never ran out.

5. Joe Biden (2021–2025)

Joe Biden
Young Joe Biden showing his long arc of public presence. (Photos: U.S. Senate Historical Office; Associated Press; White House)

Joe Biden is less about peak aesthetics and more about long-term photographic consistency.

He’s always looked… exactly like Joe Biden. Some presidents age into history. He aged into familiarity.

4. John F. Kennedy (1961–1963)

John F. Kennedy
An official White House portrait of JFK, a relaxed candid, and a famous photograph that solidifies his iconic, near-mythic photogenic status. (Photos: Cecil Stoughton/White House; Kennedy Library; Life Magazine Archive)

John F. Kennedy doesn’t just rank high—he defines the category. Everything about him feels like a blueprint for “photogenic president.”

At a certain point, it stops being history and starts feeling like mythology.

3. Gerald Ford (1974–1977)

Gerald Ford
Gerald Ford in his college football uniform, and World War II Navy service portraits that reflect his grounded, athletic presence. (Photos: University of Michigan Archives; U.S. Navy Archive; Gerald R. Ford Library)

Gerald Ford is the sleeper athletic pick nobody expects—but nobody disputes.

Before politics defined him, he looked like a man built for movement. The kind of presence that suggests he could physically resolve most disagreements.

2. Barack Obama (2009–2017)

Barack Obama
Photos of Barack Obama capturing his public charisma that helped define a modern presidential aesthetic. (Photos: White House; Associated Press; White House)

Barack Obama becomes the modern benchmark whether Republicans agree or not.

Presence, control, and camera awareness all working at maximum efficiency. He didn’t redefine presidential image—he optimized it.

1. Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933–1945)

Franklin D. Roosevelt
A young FDR in formal portrait attire, a seated White House desk portrait radiating authority, and a public-facing address image that captures his defining presidential presence. (Photos: Library of Congress; National Archives; FDR Presidential Library)

Franklin D. Roosevelt wins not on looks alone, but on sheer presence.

He doesn’t feel like a figure in history—he feels like the reason history moved. Not just photogenic. Commanding.

America has had wars, scandals, shutdowns, and at least 900 arguments about how the government is supposed to function. But one thing remains consistent: We’ve always had presidents who, at minimum, photograph extremely well under controlled lighting.

Yup. Donald Trump didn’t make the list, and somewhere, a Truth Social post is probably already drafting itself in all caps.

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