Hairstyle decision guide

Best Hairstyles for Your Face Shape

The useful question is not “Which haircut is allowed?” It is where to place length, texture, fringe, and volume for the effect you want. Start with your likely face shape, then adapt the recommendation to your hair and daily routine.

Four levers change the visual result

  • Length controls where the eye stops vertically.
  • Layers decide where width and movement appear.
  • Fringe changes the visible forehead and face length.
  • Parting and texture create symmetry, contrast, or softness.

Hairstyle guides for all seven face shapes

Oval face

Because the outline is already balanced, hairstyle choice can focus on texture, maintenance, and feature emphasis rather than correction.

Try first

  • Collarbone layers
  • Textured bob
  • Soft curtain bangs
Full oval face guide

Round face

Length, diagonals, and controlled side volume can visually extend the face without treating roundness as something that must be concealed.

Try first

  • Long face-framing layers
  • Angled lob
  • Side-swept fringe
Full round face guide

Square face

Soft texture and offset lines create contrast with the angular outline; clean geometric cuts can instead be used when the goal is to emphasize it.

Try first

  • Soft waves
  • Layered shoulder-length cuts
  • Side-swept bangs
Full square face guide

Heart face

Movement around the jaw and lower lengths can balance the wider upper face while keeping the cheekbones visible.

Try first

  • Chin-length bob
  • Collarbone waves
  • Side-swept fringe
Full heart face guide

Diamond face

Balanced volume above or below the cheekbones makes the whole outline feel connected while preserving its distinctive structure.

Try first

  • Chin-length bob
  • Side part with soft fringe
  • Shoulder-length waves
Full diamond face guide

Oblong face

Side volume, texture, and a fringe can divide the long outline into balanced sections without hiding the face.

Try first

  • Shoulder-length waves
  • Textured bob
  • Curtain bangs
Full oblong face guide

Triangle face

Upper-face volume and lighter ends redistribute attention upward while allowing the jawline to remain a strong feature.

Try first

  • Layered cuts with temple volume
  • Textured pixie
  • Side-swept bangs
Full triangle face guide

What face-shape advice cannot tell you

A photo cannot tell us your curl pattern, density, cowlicks, chemical history, styling time, or how a cut behaves in your climate. Use these pages to prepare useful questions, then make the final plan with a stylist who can assess your hair in person.

Hairstyles by face shape FAQ

How do I choose a hairstyle for my face shape?

Start with where your face carries width and length. Then use hair volume, fringe, layers, and the ending point of the cut to create contrast or emphasize the structure you like.

Does face shape decide which haircut I can wear?

No. Face shape is one styling input. Hair texture, density, growth pattern, maintenance, and personal style should decide the final cut.

Can one hairstyle work for several face shapes?

Yes. Most cuts can be adapted through length, layering, parting, fringe, and volume placement. The details matter more than the haircut name alone.