The honest answer to "how often should I get a haircut" is: it depends on your style. Human scalp hair grows an average of about half an inch (1.25cm) per month — but that half-inch means something completely different if you're wearing a skin fade versus long layers. A skin fade can look overgrown after ten days; the same half-inch of growth on shoulder-length hair is almost invisible. The cadence table below gives realistic windows for each style type.
Haircut cadence by style type
| Style | Recommended cadence | Why it grows out fast or slow |
|---|---|---|
| Buzz cut / induction cut (#0–#2) | Every 1–2 weeks | Half an inch on 3mm of hair is massive — the whole proportion changes within days |
| Skin fade / bald fade | Every 1–2 weeks | The skin section grows a visible shadow within 5–7 days; the blend degrades quickly |
| Short fade with clipper top (#3–#4 top) | Every 2–3 weeks | Slightly more growth buffer on top, but the fade still degrades at the same rate |
| Taper / crew cut / short scissor top | Every 3–4 weeks | Longer top means the shape holds longer; sides are tapered not faded so they grow out more gradually |
| Medium scissor cut (2–4 in on top) | Every 4–6 weeks | Growth is proportionally smaller relative to overall length; shape holds well until the 5–6 week mark |
| Women's bob / lob | Every 6–8 weeks | Precision perimeter shape matters — the line grows out and loses crispness, but the look still functions for several weeks |
| Longer layered styles | Every 8–10 weeks | Overall length masks growth well; visits are mainly to refresh the layers and remove bulk |
| Long layers / dusting (maintenance only) | Every 10–12 weeks | Just trimming split ends and reshaping the bottom; length is being preserved, not reduced |
Barber tip: Book your next appointment at the desk before you leave, not when you think you need it. Most people wait a week or two longer than they should, which means their barber has to fix more regrowth and can't always restore the original shape precisely.
Factors that change the cadence for you personally
Hair type and texture
Type 1 (straight) and type 2 (wavy) hair tends to show regrowth and shape loss most quickly because it lies close to the head and exposes the contour. Type 3 (curly) and type 4 (coily) hair shrinks when dry, which can disguise growth visually — but the structure and weight of a cut still changes, and shrinkage can make a shape that looked balanced at the salon appear disproportionate later. For curly and coily hair, visit cadence is less about growth rate and more about how the shrinkage pattern changes over time.
How sharply defined your style is
A hard part, a sharp line-up, or a precise perimeter line all lose definition measurably within two weeks. Softer, more textured styles with no hard lines — a lived-in crop, a shaggy medium cut — are far more forgiving and can go longer between visits without looking unkempt.
Personal growth rate
Individual growth rates vary. If you notice your fade looks overgrown at eight days rather than twelve, you likely grow faster than average and should book toward the shorter end of the recommended window. If a skin fade still looks acceptable at two and a half weeks, you can comfortably push to the longer end.
Split ends and breakage
For longer styles, the main reason to visit isn't growth — it's split ends. Splits travel up the hair shaft if left untreated, causing breakage that makes hair appear shorter and thinner. A trim every 8–12 weeks for longer styles isn't about length reduction; it's about preventing damage from undoing retained length. For more on this, see our guide on how to grow hair faster — it explains why regular trims help length retention without speeding growth itself.
A note on saving money vs. looking sharp
Stretching the gap between cuts by a week or two saves money in the short term but can mean your barber has to do more corrective work — or that your style looks unkempt for a significant portion of the time between cuts. For high-maintenance styles like a skin fade, the cost-per-week is genuinely high. If budget is a concern, consider choosing a lower-maintenance style (a tapered cut rather than a skin fade, for instance) rather than extending the wait on a style that requires frequent refreshing.
Frequently asked questions
How fast does hair grow per month?
Does getting more frequent haircuts make hair grow faster?
How do I know when my haircut needs a refresh?
Can I go longer between cuts if I use styling products?
Is it better to book haircuts on a schedule or wait until I need one?
Find a barber who keeps you on schedule
The easiest way to stay on cadence is a barber you can book quickly and trust to nail your cut every time.
Find a barber near you