The name comes from the shape: a compact, rounded cluster of curls sitting on top of the head, like the floret head of a broccoli stalk. Below it, the sides are taken down to a high or skin fade, creating maximum contrast between the dense, round top and the bare sides. The broccoli haircut exploded in popularity among teenagers and Gen-Z — partly driven by TikTok — and has become one of the most requested styles in barbershops that serve younger clients. For guys with naturally curly or coily hair, it's a celebration of natural texture. For straight-haired guys, it's achievable through a perm, and the whole process — growth, perm, upkeep — is worth understanding before you commit.
At a glance
- Best for
- Oval, oblong, square, diamond faces; type 3–4 hair (natural); type 1–2 with perm
- Hair length needed
- 3–4 in on top minimum
- Maintenance
- Medium
- Barber visit
- Every 3–4 weeks (fade); 4–6 months (perm refresh)
- Styling time
- 5–10 min
- Difficulty to grow out
- Moderate
What makes the broccoli cut look the way it does
Two things are working together in this cut. First, the volume and roundness of the top: the curls or coils need enough length (3–5 inches) to form a cohesive, rounded mass rather than lying close to the scalp. The curl pattern — whether natural or permed — lifts the hair away from the head and groups it into the cluster shape. Second, the tight fade on the sides creates the stem: a clean, almost architectural transition from bare skin up to the round mass of curls. The higher and tighter the skin fade, the more the broccoli silhouette reads clearly.
Getting the broccoli cut with straight hair: the perm process
For guys with straight or wavy hair (type 1–2), the path to a broccoli cut runs through a perm. Here's what that process actually involves:
- Grow the top to at least 3–4 inches. The perm needs length to form visible curl clusters. If you start with 2 inches, the result will be tight frizz rather than round coils.
- Choose the rod size with your stylist. A medium rod (roughly 3/4 inch diameter) creates a loose, voluminous curl suitable for the broccoli shape. Smaller rods create tighter, denser curls; larger rods give a looser wave.
- The chemical process. A reducing solution is applied to break the hair's internal bonds, the hair is wrapped around rods, and a neutralising solution sets the new curl shape. The whole appointment takes 2–3 hours. Go to a stylist experienced with men's perms — a poorly executed perm leaves the curls uneven or over-processed.
- Wait 48–72 hours before washing. Wetting the hair too soon undoes the set of the new curl pattern. Avoid tying, pinning or putting any pressure on the curls during this window.
- Switch to a sulfate-free shampoo. Sulfates strip moisture and loosen the curl pattern faster. A gentle, moisturising shampoo extends the life of the perm significantly.
Barber tip: Get the fade done after the perm, not before. The perm changes how the hair sits on the sides slightly, and a fresh fade after the curl has set gives a much cleaner result than trying to fade around damp, curled hair during the same appointment.
The broccoli cut for naturally curly and coily hair
For type 3 (curly) and type 4 (coily) hair, the broccoli shape often comes naturally with the right cut and fade. The key is getting the top to the right length and shaping the sides to complement the roundness of the curl mass. A mid fade or high fade on the sides defines the shape; a skin fade makes it most dramatic.
The afro taper is a closely related style — it uses the natural volume of coily hair with a tapered or faded side and is a direct ancestor of the modern broccoli cut's aesthetic. The difference is mainly in terminology and the specific level of contrast: the broccoli cut tends to use a higher, tighter fade for maximum silhouette impact.
Barber tip: For naturally coily hair, always ask your barber to cut the top dry. Wet coily hair stretches significantly, so cutting it wet results in a top that's shorter than expected once it dries and springs back. Dry cutting shows the true shrinkage and gives the rounded shape you're aiming for.
The right fade for a broccoli cut
The fade height determines how much of the "stem" is visible and how dramatic the silhouette reads:
- High skin fade: The most common choice. Takes the sides down to bare skin from the parietal ridge (the widest part of the head) downward, maximising the visual contrast with the round top. Needs a touch-up every 2–3 weeks.
- Mid fade: Starts at the mid-temple. Still creates strong contrast but with slightly more hair retained on the sides, giving a softer transition at the crown. Better for rounder faces where a very high fade can widen the apparent silhouette.
- Taper only: Works if you want the broccoli top without an aggressive fade — a taper keeps the sides more conservative while the curly top still reads as the focal point. Better suited to oval or oblong faces.
How to style and maintain the broccoli cut
Daily routine for a permed or naturally curly broccoli cut:
- On wash days, use a sulfate-free shampoo and a deeply hydrating conditioner. Work the conditioner through the curl clusters from root to tip, leave for 2–3 minutes, and rinse with cool water.
- While the hair is still soaking wet, apply a curl cream or a lightweight curl mousse to the top. Scrunch upward from the ends toward the roots — never rake or comb through dry curls.
- Allow to air-dry for the most natural, frizz-free result. If you use a dryer, use a diffuser attachment on the lowest heat setting, and avoid moving the diffuser around rapidly — hold it still while the curls sit inside the cup.
- On non-wash days, spritz the top with a water-based curl refresher spray and scrunch gently to reactivate the curl pattern.
- At night, pineapple the hair (gather the curls loosely at the top of the head with a soft fabric hair tie) to preserve the shape while sleeping, and sleep on a satin or silk pillowcase if possible to reduce frizz.
For a deeper dive into the right products for different curl types and whether a textured crop might suit you better if your hair is wavy rather than curly, the full hair types guide covers the differences in detail.
Frequently asked questions
What is the broccoli haircut?
Do you need naturally curly hair for the broccoli haircut?
How long does a perm for a broccoli haircut last?
How long does hair need to be for a broccoli haircut?
What face shapes suit the broccoli haircut?
How do you maintain a broccoli haircut?
Get the curl routine right
The broccoli cut depends entirely on healthy, well-defined curls — the right products make the difference between frizz and shape.
Hair products guide