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6-Step Customization)
1️⃣ Core Selection: Define Head Type & Skin Tone.
2️⃣ Refine Details: Choose Hair, Eyes, Nails, etc.
3️⃣ Feature Setup: Configure Skeleton & Special Functions.
4️⃣ Advisor Review: Specialist confirms all details and finalizes order.
5️⃣ Start Production: High-precision manufacturing begins.
6️⃣ Final Confirmation: Private video approval, then anonymous shipping.
A 155cm realistic doll weighs 26–32 kg (57–70 lbs) in TPE and 28–35 kg (62–77 lbs) in silicone. A 165cm doll jumps to 32–40 kg (70–88 lbs) in TPE and 35–45 kg (77–99 lbs) in silicone — a weight gap of 6–10 kg (13–22 lbs). That single-digit kilogram difference is the line between manageable one-person handling and a unit that requires dedicated storage plans, two-handed cleaning routines, and significant physical commitment every time you interact with it.
Who We Are
We run a US-registered adult e-commerce platform with over eight years of direct manufacturer sourcing. Our warehouse team physically handles 155cm and 165cm units side by side every inventory cycle. Every weight figure below comes from calibrated warehouse scales — not spec sheets. We’ve seen too many buyers shocked by actual weights to trust manufacturer numbers.
Age Restriction: This content is for adults 18+. All purchases require age verification through our SSL-encrypted checkout. Discreet shipping and privacy protection are standard on every order.
The 10cm Nobody Takes Seriously Enough
Ten centimeters. That’s the distance from your wrist to your elbow. On a spec sheet, it sounds trivial. 155 versus 165 — same ballpark, right?
Wrong. At this size range, those 10 centimeters pack on more weight than the jump from 100cm to 125cm combined. The physical difference between a 28 kg unit and a 38 kg unit isn’t academic. It’s the difference between cleaning in 15 minutes and cleaning in 30. Between moving the doll from closet to bed without planning, and needing to clear a path and brace your stance first.
If you’ve read our comparison of smaller doll size otions, you know weight is the variable that determines daily satisfaction. At 155cm vs 165cm, that lesson becomes even sharper.
Weight Comparison: The Numbers That Matter
Bare Unit Weight (No Upgrades)
| Material | 155cm Weight | 165cm Weight | Difference |
| TPE, standard skeleton | 26–30 kg (57–66 lbs) | 32–36 kg (70–79 lbs) | +6 kg |
| TPE, premium skeleton | 28–32 kg (62–70 lbs) | 34–38 kg (75–84 lbs) | +6 kg |
| Silicone, standard | 28–33 kg (62–73 lbs) | 35–40 kg (77–88 lbs) | +7 kg |
| Silicone, premium | 30–35 kg (66–77 lbs) | 38–45 kg (84–99 lbs) | +8–10 kg |
With Common Upgrades Added
| Configuration | 155cm | 165cm |
| Base + standing feet + removable insert | 26–32 kg | 32–38 kg |
| + Gel-fill chest | 28–34 kg | 34–40 kg |
| + Full-body heating | 29–36 kg | 36–43 kg |
| + EVO skeleton + articulated fingers | 30–37 kg | 37–45 kg |
| Fully loaded (all upgrades) | 32–40 kg | 40–50 kg |
Here’s the thing: a fully loaded 165cm silicone doll with every upgrade installed weighs as much as a small teenager. It crosses 45 kg (99 lbs). At that point, you’re not “handling” it — you’re managing heavy equipment.
[Visual suggestion: Side-by-side photo of a 155cm and 165cm doll on warehouse scales, showing actual weight readout. Natural warehouse lighting, white background. File: 155cm-vs-165cm-weight-scale-comparison.jpg. Alt: 155cm and 165cm realistic dolls weighed on calibrated floor scales]
What the Weight Difference Feels Like in Real Life
Numbers are one thing. Physical experience is another. Here’s what changes between 28 kg and 38 kg:
Moving Between Rooms
At 28 kg, you pick the doll up in a bridal carry and walk. It’s not effortless, but it’s straightforward. You don’t think about it.
At 38 kg, you pause first. You check the path for obstacles. You brace your core. The bridal carry still works, but you feel every step — and by the time you reach the bedroom, your arms are ready to put the weight down.
Bathing and Cleaning
At 28 kg, cleaning in a standard bathtub takes 15–20 minutes. You can support the doll’s torso with one arm while washing with the other. Drying is manageable with microfiber towels and patience.
At 38 kg, cleaning becomes a 25–35 minute process. You need to plan the sequence: lay the doll down first, prepare all supplies within reach, wash in sections without repositioning more than twice. Afterward, you feel it in your lower back. Not injury-level — but fatigue that accumulates session after session.
Repositioning During Use
At 28 kg, you adjust the doll’s position with one hand. Rotate a hip, bend a knee, shift the torso — all reasonable.
At 38 kg, repositioning requires both hands and deliberate force. The doll stays where you put it — which is good for stability — but adjusting mid-session takes noticeably more effort.
Beyond Weight: Other Differences at 10cm
Weight is the headline, but it’s not the only variable.
| Feature | 155cm | 165cm |
| Torso length | ~60–65 cm | ~68–75 cm |
| Leg inseam | ~70–75 cm | ~78–85 cm |
| Bust range | 64–78 cm | 68–84 cm |
| Vaginal depth | 15–18 cm | 16–19 cm |
| Storage length (lying flat) | ~160 cm | ~170 cm |
| Fits standard closet rod hanging? | Yes (most closets) | Tight (needs high rod) |
| Clothing compatibility | XS–S women’s | S–M women’s |
| Visual presence | Full adult proportion | Near life-size, imposing |
The 165cm doll has noticeably longer legs and a more elongated torso — which translates to better proportions in full-body photos and a more commanding visual presence. But it also requires more storage length, a wider range of clothing options (which adds cost), and a larger bathtub or shower for cleaning.
For buyers focused on material quality over size, check our TPE vs silicone comparison page — material choice affects weight more than most people realize.
Price Difference: What 10cm Costs
| Configuration | 155cm Price | 165cm Price | Difference |
| TPE, standard features | 650–650–900 | 800–800–1,100 | +150–150–200 |
| TPE, premium upgrades | 900–900–1,300 | 1,100–1,100–1,600 | +200–200–300 |
| Silicone, standard | 1,100–1,100–1,600 | 1,400–1,400–2,000 | +300–300–400 |
| Silicone, fully loaded | 1,600–1,600–2,200 | 2,000–2,000–2,800 | +400–400–600 |
The price gap widens with material quality. A fully loaded silicone 165cm unit can cost $600 more than its 155cm equivalent — mostly because the larger silicone mold requires more material and larger tooling.
Who Should Pick 155cm vs 165cm
| Your Situation | Pick | Reason |
| First-time buyer | 155cm | Weight is manageable. Learning curve is flatter. |
| Apartment / limited storage | 155cm | Fits more storage solutions. Easier to hide. |
| Solo handler, average strength | 155cm | One-person cleaning and moving is realistic long-term. |
| Photography priority | 165cm | Longer legs, better full-body proportions in photos. |
| Dedicated storage room | 165cm | Space isn’t a constraint, so size advantage is free. |
| Experienced owner upgrading | 165cm | You already know how to handle weight. |
| Physical limitations or back issues | 155cm | The weight gap matters. Don’t risk it. |
| Maximum visual realism | 165cm | Near life-size presence. Hard to match at 155cm. |
If you’ve already decided on a life-size doll and are comparing sizes, read our guide to whether 140cm is too small for tall buyers — it challenges the same “bigger is always better” assumption.
What Manufacturers Won’t Tell You About Weight Specs
Listed weight is almost always optimistic. We weigh every incoming unit. The actual weight runs 1.5–3 kg above manufacturer listings — consistently, across brands, for years. A 165cm doll listed at “32 kg” weighs 34–37 kg out of the box.
Weight distribution matters as much as total weight. A 165cm doll carries more mass in the upper torso and head. The center of gravity shifts upward compared to a 155cm unit, making it feel heavier during lifting than the raw kilogram number suggests.
Upgrade weight compounds differently at 165cm. Heating systems, gel-fill inserts, and EVO skeletons all scale up in weight for larger frames. A heating coil for a 165cm torso is larger and heavier than the 155cm equivalent. A gel chest on a 165cm D-cup holds more fill than a 155cm D-cup. The “per-upgrade” weight cost is higher at 165cm.
The breaking point varies by person — but it’s usually around 30 kg. Our customer feedback shows a clear pattern: below 30 kg, satisfaction holds steady. Above 35 kg, return rates and “too heavy” complaints spike noticeably. Between 30–35 kg is the gray zone — some buyers thrive, others struggle. A 155cm unit stays in or near that safe zone. A loaded 165cm sails past it.
The Short Version
If you can bench-press 40 kg without thinking about it, get the 165cm. You’ll love the proportions and presence.
If the idea of carrying 38 kg of deadweight from a storage closet to a bathtub makes you pause — even slightly — go 155cm. It still looks full-size. It still feels substantial. And six months from now, when the novelty has worn off and the routine has set in, you’ll be glad you didn’t add those extra 10 kilos to your daily life.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is the 10cm difference actually visible?
A: Yes, clearly. A 165cm doll is near the average adult female height. A 155cm doll is noticeably more petite. In photos, the 165cm has visibly longer legs and a more elongated silhouette. Up close, both look proportional — but side by side, the height gap is obvious.
Q: Can a 165cm doll be cleaned by one person?
A: Yes. But it’s work. Cleaning a 38 kg unit in a bathtub takes 25–35 minutes, requires advance setup, and fatigues your lower back. At 28 kg, the same process is faster and less physically demanding. One-person cleaning at 165cm is possible — but it’s not casual.
Q: Does the weight affect the doll skeleton’s lifespan?
A: Yes. Heavier units place more stress on joint pivot points. Over 3–5 years, a 165cm doll’s skeleton will show more joint loosening than a 155cm equivalent — especially at the hip and knee joints. Manufacturer warranties rarely cover gradual skeleton wear, so this is a hidden long-term cost.
Q: What’s the lightest 165cm configuration possible?
A: TPE, standard skeleton, no upgrades, slim body type — about 30–32 kg actual weight. But that’s bare minimum, and most buyers add at least standing feet and a removable insert. Realistically, 32–35 kg is the practical floor for a 165cm unit.
Q: Should I just go 155cm and add visual upgrades instead?
A: That’s a smart strategy. A 155cm with gel-fill chest, implanted hair, and custom makeup can look more realistic than a bare 165cm — and weigh less. If your priority is visual quality without the weight penalty, upgrade a 155cm rather than stretching to 165cm. Our upgrade options guide covers every available enhancement.