The mohawk is one of the most recognisable haircuts in the world: all the hair on the sides and back of the head is removed or cut extremely short, leaving a strip — called the crest — running from the front hairline to the nape. In its classic form the sides are shaved to the skin. In its contemporary forms, the sides are faded or tapered in a continuous gradient that frames the crest without the hard contrast. Whatever the variant, the result is a cut that draws every eye to the top of the head.
At a glance
- Best for
- Oval, oblong & square faces; straight to wavy hair (types 1–2)
- Hair length needed
- 3–6 in on the strip; sides shaved or faded to #0–#2
- Maintenance
- High (classic shaved) / Medium (faded variants)
- Barber visit
- Every 1–2 weeks (classic) or 2–3 weeks (faded)
- Styling time
- 10–15 min to style the strip up
- Grow-out difficulty
- Hard — distinct asymmetry during transition
The three main mohawk variants
The core shape is the same across all versions; what changes is the transition between the crest and the sides.
Classic (shaved-sides) mohawk
The sides and back are taken to bare skin with clippers on a #0 or a foil shaver. The crest width is usually 2–4 inches (5–10 cm) at its widest point across the crown. This is the highest-contrast, most committed version — the side regrowth is visible within a few days, which means the most frequent upkeep. The crest can be worn flat for a more understated look, or styled up into spikes or a full fanned crest.
Faded mohawk
Instead of bare skin on the sides, a barber blends from very short (typically a #0.5–#1 at the temples) up toward the crest using clipper-over-comb or fading technique. The result is softer than the classic: there is still a visible strip on top, but the sides have a gradient rather than a hard line. A skin fade into the crest sides is the most popular request — it keeps the contrast high but looks more refined. The fade needs refreshing every 2–3 weeks.
Burst-fade mohawk
The burst fade radiates outward from behind the ear in a semicircular arc, creating a rounded shape around the ear rather than a straight vertical line up the side of the head. Combined with the mohawk crest, this gives the cut a more sculptural, almost 3-D quality when viewed from the side. The burst-fade mohawk is popular in barbershop culture and works especially well on hair types 3 and 4, where the natural volume of the crest complements the curved geometry of the sides.
How to style the crest
The crest is the centrepiece of the cut, and getting it to stand up or fan out properly takes the right product, the right technique, and a little practice.
- Start with freshly washed, towel-dried hair — not soaking wet, not bone dry.
- Work a strong-hold pomade or hard wax through the strip from root to tip, coating every strand evenly.
- For individual spikes, pinch sections between your fingers and twist each one to a point.
- For a full fanned crest, use a wide-tooth comb to direct all hair upward, then blast with a hairdryer on medium heat while holding the shape.
- Once the shape is set, mist the entire crest with a light-hold hairspray and leave it to cool before releasing your hands.
- Touch up any loose sections with a small amount of additional product on your fingertips.
Barber tip: Ask your barber to leave the crest slightly wider at the crown and narrower at the temples. This follows the natural skull contour and gives the strip a more natural proportion when worn flat during low-key days.
Mohawk vs. faux hawk: what actually changes
The faux hawk (often called the "fohawk") is the office-friendly cousin of the mohawk. The core difference is the sides: a faux hawk leaves the sides short but not shaved — usually cut to a #2–#4 — so it reads as an ordinary short taper from the side. The mohawk, by contrast, has no hair on the sides, which makes the crest unmistakably intentional from any angle. The faux hawk is reversible on any given morning; the mohawk is a committed lifestyle choice until it grows out.
| Feature | Mohawk | Faux Hawk |
|---|---|---|
| Side length | Skin / #0–#0.5 | #2–#4 taper or fade |
| Contrast | Hard, dramatic | Soft, gradual |
| Work-friendly unstyled | No | Yes |
| Maintenance frequency | Every 1–2 weeks | Every 3–4 weeks |
| Grow-out ease | Hard | Easy |
Face shapes and hair types
The vertical emphasis of the mohawk adds height and draws attention upward, which is great for round and square faces that can benefit from elongation. Oval and oblong faces carry any variant naturally. Because the crest is narrow, it can make very wide faces look even wider if the strip extends too far down the temples — in that case, a slightly wider crest and a faded rather than shaved side is more flattering. Consult our face shape guide before committing. Hair types 1 (straight) and 2 (wavy) hold spikes most easily; types 3 and 4 (curly and coily) produce an impressive natural volume when the crest is picked out or left unproducted.
Frequently asked questions
How long does the strip need to be to style a mohawk up?
What is the difference between a mohawk and a faux hawk?
What type of product holds a mohawk strip up?
How often do mohawk sides need to be shaved or trimmed?
Is a mohawk suitable for all face shapes?
Can a faded mohawk be worn in a professional setting?
Keep the strip looking sharp
A good clipper and a reliable trimmer are all you need to maintain mohawk sides between barber visits.
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