Men's · Medium

Quiff Haircut: Textured Styles, How to Style & Who It Suits

Front lifted, slightly swept back, and deliberately tousled — the quiff is the more relaxed, everyday alternative to the pompadour that works with natural texture rather than fighting it.

The quiff sits in a useful middle ground between a sharp pompadour and a casual, unstyled look. It lifts the front section of hair upward — creating visible height off the forehead — but keeps the finish textured and slightly loose rather than swept-back and polished. Where a pompadour demands a round brush, a concentrator nozzle, and deliberate hold, a quiff works with a vent brush, a moderate blow-dry, and a clay or matte paste. The result suits casual, business-casual, and smart settings equally well.

At a glance

Best for
Round, oblong & oval faces; types 1–3 (straight to curly)
Hair length needed
3–5 in on top; any fade or taper on sides
Maintenance
Medium (daily styling, 5–8 min)
Barber visit
Every 3–5 weeks
Styling time
5–8 min
Difficulty to grow out
Easy

Quiff vs pompadour: the real difference

Both cuts lift hair off the forehead, but the quiff is structurally and visually distinct from the pompadour in several ways:

Quiff vs pompadour — a direct comparison
FeatureQuiffPompadour
Top length3–5 in4–6 in
Front directionUp and slightly back, sometimes with a forward waveFully swept back, no forward fall
TextureTousled, separatedUniform, smooth volume
ProductClay or matte pastePomade (water- or oil-based)
Blow-dry timeModerate (vent brush)High (round brush + concentrator)
VibeCasual to smart-casualSmart-casual to formal

If your priority is a put-together, high-polish result, the pompadour is the better choice. If you want something that looks intentional but not laboured — and works whether you are in jeans or a suit — the quiff is it.

Textured quiff: the most popular modern variation

The textured quiff keeps the lift at the front but uses point-cut ends and a matte clay to separate individual strands rather than pressing them into a uniform shape. The result has visible movement and natural-looking definition — it works especially well with wavy hair (type 2) and works paired with any fade variation from a low skin fade to a mid drop fade. The key instruction when asking your barber: "leave the ends long and point-cut them so there's texture, not a blunt line."

Barber tip: Ask for your top section to be cut with more length at the front hairline (the "quiff peak") and slightly shorter as you move toward the crown. This built-in graduation means the hair naturally falls forward at the front — you get the quiff shape with less blow-dry effort every morning.

Face shapes and the quiff

The quiff's upward volume is most useful for men whose face appears wide relative to its length. A round face benefits from the added height the quiff creates, which makes the face look less circular. Oblong faces suit a lower, more horizontal quiff to avoid adding further vertical length. Oval faces work with virtually any quiff volume. Check our face shape guide if you are unsure which category you fall into.

How to style a quiff: step-by-step routine

  1. Towel-dry to about 70% dry. Work your fingers through the hair to break it up — no combing at this stage. Quiff texture starts with slightly dishevelled damp hair, not a neat wet comb.
  2. Apply a golf-ball-sized amount of mousse or a small amount of salt spray to the top section only. Either product adds grip and amplifies natural texture without weighing the hair down. Work it through from roots to ends.
  3. Rough-dry with a vent brush, directing airflow upward. Point the dryer nozzle toward the front hairline and use the vent brush to lift the front section away from your forehead. Do not force it into a rigid shape — you are encouraging a lift, not sculpting a helmet.
  4. Use the round brush on the front section only. If you want more defined volume at the very front, take the front 2 inches and roll it up with a medium round brush, holding the dryer underneath for 8–10 seconds. This is optional; skipping it gives a more relaxed result.
  5. Cool with a cold-air blast. 10 seconds of cold air on the front section locks in the lift before you add product.
  6. Warm a small amount of matte clay between your palms. For a textured quiff, use roughly a pea-sized amount — less product means more natural movement. Work it through with your fingers, starting at the roots of the front section and pulling upward and back.
  7. Separate and define with fingertips. Press two or three fingers into the top section and gently pull upward to define a few strands. The goal is separation, not uniformity. Avoid combing — a comb will remove the texture the clay just created.
  8. Optional finish: one light pass of flexible-hold spray over the lifted front section if you are in a humid climate or need the style to last through a long day.

Barber tip: If your quiff collapses by lunchtime, switch to a stronger-hold clay and apply half to damp hair before blow-drying and half to dry hair after. Layering product this way gives both grip and finish without heaviness.

Choosing the right product

The quiff is one of the cuts most sensitive to product choice because the texture is the style. For the full breakdown of hold levels and finishes for different hair types, see our hair products guide. In short:

  • Matte clay (medium–strong hold): The default choice for a textured quiff. Adds grip, separation, and a natural finish without shine. Best for straight and wavy hair.
  • Matte paste: Similar to clay but slightly lighter. Good for finer hair that clay can weigh down.
  • Water-based pomade (medium hold, semi-shine): For a polished quiff rather than a textured one. Gives a slightly wetter, defined look.
  • Sea-salt spray (as a pre-styler): Excellent for wavy or curly hair. Apply before blow-drying to amplify natural texture, then finish with a light clay.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a quiff and a pompadour?
A pompadour lifts the hair high off the forehead in a uniform, rounded volume and sweeps it straight back. A quiff lifts the front section up and slightly back but keeps the finish looser and more textured — it also often has a slight forward fall or wave at the front rather than being fully swept rearward. The quiff reads as more casual; the pompadour reads as more polished and structured.
How much hair length do I need for a quiff?
You need a minimum of 3 inches on top to build a quiff with visible lift. Four to five inches gives you more flexibility in how much volume you create. The sides can be kept at anything from a #1 skin fade to a #3 or #4 taper — shorter sides increase the contrast and make the top look more dramatic.
What product should I use for a quiff?
A medium-hold matte clay or paste is the best choice for a textured quiff — it provides grip and separation without making the hair look stiff or glossy. For a slightly more polished quiff, a water-based pomade with medium hold and semi-shine works well. Avoid heavy gels, which make the finish look wet and remove the casual texture the quiff depends on.
Does a quiff suit curly or wavy hair?
Yes — in fact, type 2 (wavy) hair can produce one of the best natural quiffs because the wave adds volume and movement without needing as much blow-dry work. Type 3 (curly) hair produces a more textured, voluminous version. Both hair types should apply product to damp hair and scrunch-dry rather than over-straightening, so the natural texture remains part of the style.
How often do I need to get a quiff cut?
If you have a quiff paired with a fade, return to the barber every 3–4 weeks to keep the sides clean. If you are wearing longer, tapered sides, you can stretch to 5–6 weeks. The top grows out gracefully and does not need trimming as frequently as the sides.

Style it right every morning

A quiff depends on the right clay and dryer — see what is actually worth buying.

See recommended tools