Women's Haircuts
Whether you're considering a bold chop, a lived-in shag, or a set of face-framing bangs, every style here comes with a full guide — what it is, who it suits, how to ask for it, and what to expect in the chair.
Short
Short women's cuts are some of the most commitment-heavy but also some of the most striking. Once you're past the grow-out anxiety, they tend to be lower maintenance than longer styles — no tangles, fast drying, and a shape that holds itself. The right cut depends heavily on your face shape and hair texture, so read both guides before you book.
Mid-length & bobs
The bob family is the most versatile in women's hair. It covers everything from chin-length blunt cuts to collarbone-skimming lobs, and every variation in between. Bobs work on virtually every face shape when the length and angle are adjusted correctly — a chin-length bob, for example, elongates a round face, while an angled bob draws attention up on a long face.
Bob Haircut
Timeless jaw-to-chin length cut — blunt, angled, or inverted depending on your goal.
Read guide →Lob (Long Bob)
Collarbone-length cut that keeps the easy shape of a bob without sacrificing too much length.
Read guide →Blunt Cut
One clean, horizontal line with no layering — maximises thickness and creates a graphic, modern look.
Read guide →Long & layered
Long cuts are often less about the length itself and more about what happens within it. Layers add movement, remove bulk, and control frizz in a way that a single-length long cut cannot. Whether you want face-framing softness or full-body bounce, the guides below explain the cut, who it works for, and how to maintain it without losing length faster than you'd like.
Layered Haircut
Multiple length layers cut through the hair to add movement, volume, and shape without losing length.
Read guide →Long Layers
Subtle length graduation that adds flow and lightness to very long hair without changing the overall shape.
Read guide →Butterfly Cut
Face-framing layers that cascade outward like wings — adds volume at the crown while keeping length.
Read guide →Bangs & fringe
Bangs change the character of any haircut and can be added to almost any length. The key question is always face shape: curtain bangs suit most faces, blunt bangs need an oval or heart face to avoid closing down the face, and side-swept fringe is the most forgiving option for round and square faces. If you're unsure, start with curtain bangs — they grow out gracefully and suit nearly everyone.
Textured & trending
Textured cuts embrace movement, volume, and imperfection — they often look best when they're slightly lived-in rather than freshly blown out. The wolf cut and shag have both had a major resurgence recently, driven partly by how well they work with naturally wavy and curly hair types. If you have type 2 or type 3 hair, these styles are worth serious consideration.
Wolf Cut
Shaggy layers, curtain fringe, and wispy ends — the cut that defined early-mid 2020s hair.
Read guide →Shag Haircut
Heavy layers, choppy ends, and built-in fringe — a 70s-rooted cut that suits almost every hair texture.
Read guide →Tip: Not sure whether a textured or sleek cut works better for your texture? Our hair types guide explains the type 1–4 system and maps each texture to the cuts that work with it — not against it.
Find the right salon
A skilled stylist makes every cut look better. Our guide helps you find a specialist near you and know what to ask before you sit down.
How to find a great salon