The man bun is not a haircut in the traditional sense — no significant length is removed to achieve it. It is what happens when long hair meets a hair tie. But "long enough to tie back" is actually quite specific: most men underestimate how much length is needed, hit the awkward in-between phase and cut everything off, and never experience what a well-maintained man bun actually looks like. Knowing the real requirements, the right technique, and the correct care routine is the difference between pulling it off and giving up at the four-inch stage.
At a glance
- Best for
- All face shapes; particularly flattering on square and oval faces
- Hair length needed
- Minimum 6 in; ideal 8–12 in
- Maintenance
- Medium (regular conditioning + trims)
- Barber visit
- Every 8–10 weeks for a trim
- Styling time
- 2–5 min to tie
- Grow-out difficulty
- Hard — 12–18 months from short hair
Full bun vs. half-up bun
The full man bun gathers all the hair on the head into a single bun, typically placed at the back of the crown or just below it. The half-up bun takes only the top section of hair and ties it into a bun while leaving the lower back and sides down. The half-up is achievable with less length (as little as 4–5 inches on the top section) and is the practical bridge style while growing toward a full bun. It also works as a distinct style in its own right — the contrast between the gathered top and loose lower hair creates more visual interest than either element alone.
The undercut man bun
The undercut man bun is the most modern iteration of the style. An undercut removes the sides and back to a very short length (#0–#2 with clippers), leaving the top and crown long — typically 6–10 inches. All the long hair is gathered and tied into a bun at the crown. The effect is clean and structured: the shaved sides make the face visible and the bun sits higher and more prominently. The trade-off is that the undercut needs maintaining every 3–4 weeks and makes the grow-out significantly more complex if you want to switch to a full-all-over-long style later.
The undercut man bun vs. the top knot
The top knot is a close relative: it also ties long top hair into a knot, usually with shorter or faded sides, but the knot sits specifically at the very top of the head (the vertex), is typically smaller and tighter, and uses less total length. A man bun sits lower on the back of the crown and tends to be fuller. The distinction is mainly positional and about size: think of the top knot as a precise, compact version of the man bun concept.
How to tie a man bun correctly
- Gather all the hair with both hands, pulling it back from the forehead and temples toward the intended bun position.
- Hold the gathered hair and slide a fabric-covered elastic or spiral hair tie around the bundle twice — not a rubber band, which damages hair.
- On the third loop, pull the hair only halfway through to create a loop, not a full pull-through ponytail. This is the bun.
- Fan the loop out into a rounded bun shape with your fingers.
- Tuck any stray ends under the elastic or pin them with a single bobby pin if needed.
- Check the tension: the bun should sit comfortably with no pulling at the scalp. If it hurts, loosen it immediately.
Barber tip: Vary the bun position slightly each day — a few centimetres forward or back — so that you are not stressing the same follicles repeatedly. This simple habit dramatically reduces the risk of traction damage at the hairline over time.
Caring for long hair
Long hair is older hair at the ends — the tips of 8-inch hair have been on your head for 16+ months and have been through hundreds of wash, dry, and tie cycles. The care routine matters more than with short hair. See our men's hair care routine guide for the full picture, but the key steps are: shampoo no more than 3–4 times per week to preserve natural oils; always condition after shampooing; detangle with a wide-tooth comb starting at the ends and working upward; use a weekly deep-conditioning mask to restore moisture to the ends; and trim every 8–10 weeks to prevent split ends from travelling up the shaft. If you are trying to grow hair faster, scalp health matters more than any topical product.
Traction alopecia: the real risk
Traction alopecia is the progressive thinning and recession of the hairline caused by repeated tension. A tightly tied man bun, worn daily, puts chronic stress on the follicles at the temples and front hairline. Early warning signs are: tenderness or soreness at the hairline after wearing the bun, small folliculitis bumps at the root, and slight thinning at the temples. If you notice any of these, stop wearing a tight bun immediately and switch to a loose style or wear the hair down for several weeks. The damage is reversible in the early stages but permanent if the follicles are scarred.
Important: Never go to sleep with a tightly tied bun. Hours of tension against a pillow multiplies the stress on the hairline. If you want to protect the hair while sleeping, use a loose plait instead.
Frequently asked questions
How long does hair need to be for a man bun?
What is the difference between a man bun and a top knot?
How do you tie a man bun without damaging hair?
What is traction alopecia and can a man bun cause it?
What is an undercut man bun?
How do you care for long hair for a man bun?
Grow it right, tie it right
The right hair care products and a snag-free hair tie make the difference between healthy long hair and a damaged hairline.
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