For men with significant hair loss, the choice usually comes down to two options: a buzz cut or a fully shaved head. Both look significantly better than compensating styles. But they're not the same, and the right choice depends on your stage of hair loss, your face shape, and how much maintenance you want to commit to.
Quick answer: buzz cut or shaved head for balding?
For the full cut-by-cut breakdown at your stage, see the best haircuts for Norwood 4 and Norwood 5 guides, or the Norwood scale haircuts hub.
The buzz cut for balding men
Works well for
- ✓Norwood 1–4 hair loss
- ✓Men who want minimal maintenance without committing to a fully shaved head
- ✓Square and oblong face shapes
Avoid if
- ✗Norwood 5–7 where remaining hair is too patchy for a consistent buzz
- ✗Men who want absolute zero maintenance (shave is easier than maintaining a Grade 1 buzz)
The buzz cut works best when hair loss is even enough that the remaining hair creates a consistent coverage — even if that coverage is thin.
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Preview on my face — freeThe shaved head for balding men
The shaved head works best for advanced hair loss where remaining hair is sparse or patchy. It reads as a confident choice rather than a compensation.
Which suits your face shape?
What to say to your barber
“For a buzz cut with advanced balding: Grade 1–2 all over, fade the sides down to skin at the bottom. I want it uniform and clean. For preparing to go fully shaved: Take it all down to Grade 0 or 0.5 first, then I'll shave the rest at home.”
Square: Both work well — the buzz cut's slight texture can actually soften an extremely square jaw slightly.
Round: A buzz cut is generally better. The slight hair on top provides a tiny amount of height. A fully shaved head can emphasise roundness.
Oblong: A buzz cut at Grade 3+ is better — the slight length on top reduces the elongated appearance. A shaved head on an oblong face can look very long.
Maintenance comparison
Shaved head: Razor every 2–3 days. Moisturiser daily. SPF when outdoors. 5–10 minutes per session, but more frequent.
A buzz cut has lower per-session effort but needs refreshing more often. A shaved head needs more frequent attention but each session is shorter.
Frequently asked questions
- At what stage of baldness should I just shave my head?
- Most barbers and stylists suggest Norwood 5 — when significant top coverage is lost and remaining hair forms a horseshoe pattern. Before that, a buzz cut usually looks more natural.
- Does shaving your head help or hurt a round face?
- A fully shaved head can emphasise roundness because it removes any height from the top of the head. A buzz cut at Grade 2–3 is usually better for round faces as it provides some visual structure.
- Can I try a buzz cut before committing to a shaved head?
- Yes — a buzz cut is the natural transition step. Many men start with a Grade 2–3 buzz cut and gradually move to Grade 1–2 as they get comfortable with shorter hair.
- What's the difference between a Grade 1 buzz and a shaved head?
- A Grade 1 buzz leaves 3mm of hair. A shaved head leaves none. The difference is visible at close range but at arm's length both look very similar.
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