A skin fade — also called a bald fade or zero fade — is a barbering technique where the sides and back are graduated from the longest hair on top down to completely bare skin at the baseline. Unlike a standard fade haircut that stops at a short clipper guard, a skin fade removes every trace of hair at the lowest point. The result is the highest contrast possible between the top section and the sides, making whatever style you wear on top look sharper, cleaner, and more deliberate.
At a glance
- Best for
- Oval, diamond & square faces; all hair types
- Hair length needed
- 1.5 in (4 cm) or more on top recommended
- Maintenance
- High — visible regrowth within days
- Barber visit
- Every 1–2 weeks for a fresh fade
- Styling time
- 3–10 min depending on top style
- Difficulty to grow out
- Moderate — sides grow through stubble before blending
How a barber creates a skin fade
Getting to bare skin takes more passes and tools than a standard fade. A skilled barber follows a consistent process:
- Establish the length on top — scissor or clipper work on the top section is done first so the barber knows the target length for the blend.
- Set the fade line — using a #1 or #1.5 guard, the barber marks where the fade will sit (low, mid or high) and works the bulk of hair down from there toward the baseline.
- Step down through guards — each pass drops one guard: #1 → #0.5 → #0 (open blade), moving the transition zone progressively lower.
- Zero-gap or foil shave the baseline — the clipper blade is adjusted to cut flush (zero gap), or a foil shaver is run over the very bottom to remove the final shadow and reveal bare skin. This is what separates a skin fade from every other fade type.
- Blend the transition — with the blade slightly open, the barber rocks the clipper in a flicking motion through the gradient to eliminate any hard lines between guard lengths.
- Clean the neckline and around the ears — a liner or straight razor sharpens the edges.
Low, mid and high skin fade — what's the difference?
The height at which the skin line sits changes the entire personality of the cut. All three go to bare skin; the difference is where that bare skin starts. Check our complete fade guide for a visual breakdown of heights across all fade types.
| Type | Skin starts at | Personality | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low skin fade | Just above the ear and sideburn, ~1 cm above the natural hairline | Subtle, clean, versatile | Professional settings, first-time fade |
| Mid skin fade | Level with the middle of the ear / temple | Bold but balanced | Most face shapes; everyday wear |
| High skin fade | Above the temples, well above the ear | Dramatic, high-contrast | Square and oval faces; statement styles |
Barber tip: If this is your first skin fade, ask for a low skin fade. It gives you the crisp bald line without exposing a wide band of scalp — much easier to grow out if you decide it is not for you.
Which styles pair with a skin fade?
Because the sides are stripped back to skin, almost any style on top benefits from the contrast. The most popular pairings:
- Textured crop or French crop — a short, horizontal fringe with disconnected skin sides. The go-to modern combination. See the French crop guide for length and texture tips.
- Pompadour — voluminous swept-back top against a high skin fade creates the maximum statement. Use a strong-hold pomade to keep the volume up. Read the pompadour guide for product and styling detail.
- Comb-over — a side-parted top swept over the fade. The skin sides make the part look crisp even without a razor line. See the comb-over guide.
- Afro — a full, rounded natural afro on top with a low or mid skin fade underneath. The fade emphasises the shape of the afro rather than hiding it.
- Faux hawk — strip of longer hair down the centre with skin-faded sides. Check the faux hawk guide for length and product advice.
Skin fade and scalp care
Bare skin exposed by a fresh fade is more sensitive than the rest of your scalp. Neglect it and you get dryness, flaking, razor bumps, or ingrown hairs — especially on coarser hair types. A simple routine keeps it clean and comfortable:
- Day of the cut: Apply a light, fragrance-free moisturiser to the faded area. Avoid heavy oils that can block freshly opened follicles.
- Outdoors: Use a broad-spectrum SPF 30 or higher on exposed skin. A fresh skin fade offers zero sun protection.
- Days 2–4: If you're prone to razor bumps or ingrown hairs, gently apply a mild salicylic acid toner on a cotton pad to the faded zone. Do not scrub.
- Before your next appointment: Keep the area moisturised. Dry, flaky skin makes re-fading uneven because the blade drags.
Barber tip: Tell your barber if your skin is sensitive or if you're prone to keloids — they can use a foil shaver rather than an open blade at the baseline, which is gentler and reduces bump risk significantly.
How to ask your barber for a skin fade
The more specific you are, the better the result. Walking in and saying "skin fade" alone leaves the height, the top style, and the edge style open to interpretation. Use this language:
- Name the height: "low skin fade," "mid skin fade," or "high skin fade."
- Describe the top: length in inches or centimetres, and whether you want scissors, clippers, or a razor to texturise.
- Specify any edges: "sharp line-up at the front" or "natural hairline."
- Mention hair type concerns: "I get razor bumps" or "my hair is very coily — please go slowly at the baseline."
- Bring a reference photo. Even a rough one on your phone eliminates ambiguity about fade height.
Not sure how to talk to your barber in general? Our guide to asking your barber covers the full vocabulary.
How does a skin fade compare to other fades?
If a skin fade sounds too drastic, there are softer alternatives in the fade family. A low fade or mid fade stops at a short guard rather than bare skin, giving you a clean gradient without fully exposed scalp. A taper fade blends more gradually and usually stays close to the natural hairline — professional and understated. For a gentler introduction to fades, those are the better starting points. Once you know what a fade feels like to maintain, stepping up to a skin fade is a natural progression.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between a skin fade and a regular fade?
How often do I need to get a skin fade touched up?
Does a skin fade hurt or damage the scalp?
What hairstyles pair best with a skin fade?
Can I get a skin fade with curly or coily hair?
How do I care for my scalp after a skin fade?
Keep your skin fade sharp between visits
A quality trimmer and foil shaver make all the difference when you're freshening up edges at home.
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