Most fades wrap all the way around the head: they start at one sideburn, travel around the nape, and finish at the other sideburn, graduating from short to shorter in a continuous band. The burst fade works completely differently. It fades in a focused semicircle around each ear — radiating outward like a sunburst — then stops. The hair at the nape and lower back is left longer, at whatever length the style on top requires. This localised approach is what makes the burst fade the essential technique for mohawks, mullets, faux hawks, and afro-textured styles that need length and weight preserved at the back.
At a glance
- Best for
- Oval, oblong & square faces; curly, coily & textured hair
- Hair length needed
- Varies — can work on short or long tops
- Maintenance
- Medium — every 2–3 weeks
- Barber visit
- Every 2–3 weeks
- Styling time
- 5–15 min depending on top length
- Difficulty to grow out
- Easy — nape length stays, only the ear arc grows
What exactly is a burst fade?
Picture the ear as the centre of a compass. The burst fade draws a semicircle from just above the ear, curving under it and ending just below it on the other side. Within that arc, the hair is graduated from the top length down to very short or bare skin at the edge of the semicircle. Outside the arc — the nape, the lower back, the crown — the hair stays at the chosen length.
The effect is a clean, rounded burst of short hair framing the ear, almost like a halo. It provides contrast and definition without eliminating the back length, which is exactly what makes it the right technique for styles that rely on back-of-head weight.
Barber tip: The size of the semicircle changes the look dramatically. A tight arc close to the ear is subtle and clean. A wide arc that extends well above and below the ear is bolder and more editorial. Tell your barber which you want — "tight burst" vs "wide burst" communicates this quickly.
Why the burst fade is the natural pair for mohawks and mullets
The mohawk is defined by a strip of longer hair running from forehead to nape, with short sides. A full fade on the sides would cut into the back section of that strip and create an awkward disconnected look at the nape. The burst fade solves this: it fades only the area around the ear, so the mohawk strip continues uninterrupted from the crown all the way down to the nape. The result is a cleaner, more coherent mohawk with sharp sides and a natural back line.
The same logic applies to a mullet. A mullet keeps length at the back deliberately — "business in front, party in back." A full fade would undermine that back length by cutting into it from below. A burst fade instead frames the ear and leaves the mullet's back section entirely intact, giving the style its proper shape and proportion.
A faux hawk — a softer mohawk that blends rather than disconnects the sides — also benefits from a burst fade for the same reason. The arc around the ear provides the contrast that makes the centre strip pop without removing the back softness that a faux hawk depends on.
Burst fade with curly and afro-textured hair
The burst fade has become closely associated with natural hair, and for good reason. Type 3 curly and type 4 coily hair tends to form a rounded, expansive silhouette — and the burst fade's circular shape mirrors that naturally. Rather than imposing a hard geometric line across the head, the arc of the burst fade feels like it belongs to the hair's own shape.
On an afro, a burst fade draws a clean edge around the ear while leaving the full circumference of the afro above intact. On tightly coiled hair shaped into a tapered top, the burst fade below the ear gives definition without sacrificing the texture and body that make the style. See our hair types guide for how to care for natural texture before and after a fade appointment.
Burst fade vs. drop fade: what's the difference?
These two curved-line fades are often confused. The key difference is scope. A drop fade curves behind the ear and continues fading all the way around the back of the head — it just does so at a lower arc than a level fade. A burst fade stops at the ear. The nape is untouched. The burst is a localised frame; the drop is a full wrap with a curved shape. If you want to keep back length, choose the burst. If you want the whole head faded but with a rounder shape, the drop fade is the better call.
| Feature | Burst Fade | Drop Fade |
|---|---|---|
| Fade location | Semicircle around ear only | Full perimeter, arc behind ear |
| Nape length | Preserved at top length | Faded short like the sides |
| Best top styles | Mohawk, mullet, faux hawk, afro | Comb-over, curly top, quiff |
| Overall look | Bold, localized, editorial | Shaped, organic, all-around clean |
How to ask your barber for a burst fade
- Say "burst fade" and indicate which ear areas you want the arc to reach — just around the ear lobe, or wider, going up toward the temple and down toward the jaw.
- Tell the barber the desired end length of the burst — skin (zero gap), #0.5 (1.5mm), or a shadow #1 (3mm). Check the clipper guard sizes chart if you are unsure.
- Describe what you want on top and at the nape separately — the top length, any texture cuts, and whether the nape should be left natural or cleaned up with a straight edge.
- Bring a reference photo. The burst fade has many variations and a photo eliminates all guesswork about arc size and fade depth.
- After the cut, ask to see both sides and the back before leaving the chair — asymmetry in the arc is easy to spot and easy to fix if caught immediately.
Frequently asked questions
What exactly is a burst fade?
Why does a burst fade work so well with a mohawk?
Is a burst fade good for curly or afro hair?
How is a burst fade different from a drop fade?
How often does a burst fade need maintaining?
Can women get a burst fade?
Style your burst fade at home
The right clippers and trimmer keep the arc sharp between barber visits without guesswork.
See recommended tools