A transparent hair decision tool

What Haircut Should I Get? Find a Style That Fits Your Real Hair.

Upload one clear photo, add the real hair facts only you know, and get a plan for styling, cutting, keeping length, or growing it out.

Start with one clear, front-facing photo

Use even light, expose your forehead and jaw outline, and avoid hats, strong filters, or a tilted angle.

A better answer to “What Haircut Should I Get?”

A useful answer should fit your real hair, support the look you want, show its trade-offs, and give you a clear starting point for a barber or stylist.

Understand your starting point

We measure visible facial proportions first, then combine them with the texture, density, and length you confirm.

Rank realistic options

A structured engine first filters silhouettes by facial structure, then ranks them using your real hair conditions.

Understand all three groups

See twelve distinct looks across three positive groups, with clear reasons based on facial structure, hair, and goals.

Take an actionable plan

Turn the winning direction into concise lengths, shape, texture, and barber instructions.

Useful advice, not a beauty score

The goal is not to judge your face. It is to show how haircut structures interact with your features, real hair, and preferences—and where a stylist's judgement still matters. For anyone asking “What Haircut Should I Get?”, facial proportions guide the first filter, but they are not a verdict: growth patterns, density, texture, maintenance time, products, and how you wear your hair can change whether a cut is sensible day to day.

Every result separates facial-structure fit, hair compatibility, desired effect, and style preference.

Four steps, one clearer decision

The free photo pre-check runs locally before any generation credits are used.

1

Add one clear photo

A local pre-check catches blur, poor lighting, extreme angles, and bad framing without spending image-generation credits.

2

Choose your goal and boundaries

Add texture, density, and current length, then choose styling only, keep length, a new cut, or grow-out planning. Direction-specific questions set the limits we cannot cross.

3

Review three positive directions

Compare Best for you, Easy everyday, and Try a new style, with four haircut or achievable styling options in each group.

4

Preview and brief your stylist

Generate twelve suitable haircut or styling looks across the three directions, then save the comparison, avoidance notes, and salon brief.

One recommendation package, six useful layers

Designed to reduce haircut regret before you sit down in the chair.

Local photo pre-check

Repeat photo-quality and face-geometry checks locally without calling a paid analysis API.

Face and hair profile

Continuous visual cues are combined with the hair facts only you know.

Three positive groups

Best for you, Easy everyday, and Try a new style—without spending a third of the report on deliberately poor matches.

Face structure first

Filter for silhouettes that balance your facial proportions before other answers affect the ranking.

Haircut and styling previews

Generate suitable cuts, finished textures, braids, ponytails, or updos while explicitly preserving face, pose, clothing, and background.

Barber-ready brief

Save structured instructions for length, sides, shape, texture, and cutting technique.

“What Haircut Should I Get?”—answered transparently

The method, limits, photo handling, credits, and try-on expectations in plain language.








Still asking, “What Haircut Should I Get?”

Start with explainable recommendations, compare twelve looks across three groups, then bring a more useful brief to your appointment.