Best Hairstyles for a Big Forehead
Embracing a Larger Forehead
A larger forehead is a common concern, but it is far more noticeable to you than to anyone else. Many of the world's most attractive faces — from Rihanna to Ryan Reynolds — feature prominent foreheads. The key is not hiding your forehead but choosing a hairstyle that creates visual balance between your forehead and the rest of your features.
The right cut distributes attention across your entire face rather than drawing the eye to a single area. And the options are far more varied than simply "get bangs."
Best Hairstyles for Women
Curtain Bangs
Curtain bangs are the most popular and versatile option for a larger forehead. They split in the center and frame the face, partially covering the forehead without creating a hard horizontal line. The soft, face-hugging shape reduces the visible forehead area while looking natural and effortless.
Curtain bangs work with almost every face shape and hair texture. They also grow out gracefully — no awkward stages.
Side-Swept Bangs
A deep side part with longer bangs swept across the forehead creates a diagonal line that breaks up the vertical space. This is a subtler alternative to full bangs and works particularly well for women who do not want to commit to maintaining a fringe.
Wispy Bangs
Lighter, see-through bangs that partially show the forehead underneath. They soften the hairline without completely covering it, creating a delicate, feminine effect. Wispy bangs are lower maintenance than thick, blunt bangs and more forgiving as they grow.
Layered Cuts with Volume
Layers that create width at the cheekbones and jawline draw the eye downward and create proportional balance. The increased width in the mid-face area makes the forehead appear narrower by comparison.
Avoid Center Parts on Very High Foreheads
A center part creates a visible peak at the hairline that emphasizes forehead height. An off-center or side part distributes hair across the forehead more evenly.
Best Hairstyles for Men
The French Crop
A French crop with a short, forward fringe is the single most effective men's cut for a large forehead. The blunt, horizontal fringe sits across the forehead and reduces its visible area. The textured top adds density and visual interest.
Ask your barber for a textured crop with the fringe sitting at or just above the eyebrows. The texture in the fringe prevents it from looking like a bowl cut.
The Textured Fringe
A longer variation of the French crop where the fringe is textured and slightly longer, falling naturally across the forehead. It provides coverage without looking intentionally placed. The key is texture — smooth, flat fringe looks deliberate and unnatural, while textured fringe looks effortless.
The Side Part
A classic side part directs hair across the forehead diagonally, reducing the visible area without bangs. It works best when the hair on top is long enough to have natural movement and the part is positioned to create asymmetrical coverage.
The Quiff
A quiff adds height and volume at the front of the head, which paradoxically can work with a larger forehead. The volume at the front creates a strong silhouette that makes the forehead part of the style's architecture rather than an exposed area.
This works best when the quiff has texture and movement rather than a rigid, slicked-back shape.
Avoid the Slicked-Back Look
Pulling hair straight back fully exposes the forehead and makes it the dominant feature. Unless you are going for a power look intentionally, styles that bring hair forward or to the side are more flattering.
Styling Tips for Both
Create Volume at the Sides
Volume at the sides of the head creates horizontal balance that makes the forehead appear narrower. Whether through layers, curls, or styling technique, width at the mid-face draws attention away from the forehead.
Keep Attention at Eye Level
Styles that draw the eye to the eyes and cheekbones — through face-framing layers, highlights around the face, or bangs that sit at the brow — shift the focal point downward from the forehead.
Avoid Harsh, Pulled-Back Styles
High, tight ponytails and slicked-back buns fully expose the forehead. If you pull your hair back, leave a few face-framing pieces out to soften the hairline.
Try Forehead-Flattering Styles
Upload a selfie to an AI hairstyle tool and compare curtain bangs, French crops, side-swept styles, and other forehead-flattering options on your actual face. Seeing the difference in proportion on your own features is the fastest way to find your ideal style.
Try it yourself
See any hairstyle on your own photo before committing. Upload a selfie and preview cuts, colors, and styles in seconds — free on iOS and Android.
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