Guide

Face Shape Guide: The Best Haircut for Your Face

The right cut works with your proportions. Here's how to measure your face shape in two minutes — and the styles that flatter each one.

A great haircut balances your features. The goal for almost everyone is to move toward the proportions of an oval: a touch more length than width, with no single area overpowering the rest. Once you know your face shape, you can add height where a face is wide, soften a strong jaw, or fill out a narrow chin. Start by working out which of the seven shapes below is yours.

How to measure your face shape

Tie your hair back, face a mirror, and compare four measurements: forehead, cheekbones, jaw and overall face length (hairline to chin). The relationship between them tells you the shape.

Outlines of seven face shapes: oval, round, square, oblong, heart, diamond and triangle Oval Round Square Oblong Heart Diamond Triangle
The seven face shapes. Most people are a blend of two — match the closest.

Oval face

Slightly longer than it is wide, with a gently rounded jaw and forehead a touch wider than the chin. The most balanced shape, so almost anything works. The only caution is not to add too much height and weight on top, which can lengthen the face too far. Great picks: the crew cut, buzz cut, pompadour, or for women a bob or curtain bangs.

Round face

Width and length are similar with soft, full cheeks and a rounded jaw. The aim is to add length and angles. Keep the sides short and build height on top. Try a high fade with a quiff or pompadour; for women, long layers and side-swept fringes. Avoid heavy, straight-across fringes and rounded mushroom shapes.

Square face

Strong, angular jaw with forehead, cheeks and jaw roughly equal in width. You can either lean into the masculinity or soften it. Sharp, classic cuts look superb here — a side part, Ivy League or taper. Textured tops soften the angles if you prefer. For women, soft layers and waves balance the jaw.

Oblong / rectangular face

Noticeably longer than it is wide. The goal is the opposite of a round face: avoid extra height, which exaggerates the length, and keep some weight and fullness on the sides. A French crop, Caesar or a medium fringe shortens the face; curtain bangs work for everyone. Skip tall pompadours and very short sides with a high top.

Heart face

A wider forehead narrowing to a pointed chin, often with high cheekbones. Balance the narrow lower face by avoiding too much volume up top and adding a little fullness lower down. A textured crop, a medium-length fringe, or for women a chin-length lob or shag with face-framing layers all flatter this shape.

Diamond face

Widest at the cheekbones with a narrower forehead and chin. Add width at the forehead and keep some length to balance the cheekbones. Fringes and textured tops work well — a fringe, French crop or quiff; for women, curtain bangs and chin-length layers. Avoid slicking everything back tight, which exposes the narrow forehead.

Triangle face

A wider jaw narrowing toward a smaller forehead — the inverse of heart. Build volume and width up top to balance the jaw. Fuller, textured tops and styles with height suit best: a pompadour, quiff or volumised layers. Keep the sides from getting too bulky around the jaw.

Quick reference: what each face shape is trying to achieve.
Face shapeGoalGo-to styles
OvalMaintain balanceAlmost anything
RoundAdd height, lose widthHigh fade + quiff, long layers
SquareKeep or soften anglesSide part, taper, soft layers
OblongReduce length, add side weightFrench crop, Caesar, fringe
HeartBalance narrow chinTextured crop, lob, shag
DiamondWiden foreheadFringe, curtain bangs
TriangleAdd volume on topPompadour, layered volume

Barber tip: Face shape is a guide, not a law. Your hair type, hairline and how much time you'll spend styling matter just as much. Bring a couple of reference photos and read how to ask your barber so you leave with the cut you pictured.

Frequently asked questions

How do I work out my face shape?
Pull your hair back, look straight into a mirror and measure four things: forehead width, cheekbone width, jaw width and face length (hairline to chin). Compare them. If your face is clearly longer than it is wide and the widths are similar, you are oval or oblong. If width and length are close, you are round or square. A wide forehead narrowing to a small chin is heart; the widest point at the cheekbones is diamond.
What is the most versatile face shape for haircuts?
The oval face is considered the most versatile because it is balanced and slightly longer than it is wide, so almost any haircut works. People with other face shapes often aim to create the illusion of an oval — adding height to round faces, softening square jaws, or balancing a narrow chin.
Does face shape really matter for choosing a haircut?
It matters, but it is one factor among several. Hair type, density, hairline, lifestyle and how much styling you will actually do all count too. Use face shape to steer toward flattering proportions — for example more height if your face is round — rather than as a strict rulebook.
What haircut makes a round face look slimmer?
Add height and keep the sides shorter. For men, a pompadour, quiff or high fade lengthens the face; for women, long layers and side-swept styles do the same. Avoid heavy fringes straight across and very short, rounded all-over cuts that echo the roundness.

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