The best summer haircuts can be short or long, and the cut can be opted with layers, bangs, or undercut. Summer is all about feeling comfy, young, and free. Pixies and bobs are at the top of the list when thinking of a perfect chop for the hottest season. You’ll feel the breeze on your neck, and these short haircuts take lesser time to prep in the mornings.
Long hair would be great, too, if you love trying different looks every day. Explore various styles with ponytails, buns, and braids. Voluminous and airy hairstyles are also trendsetting. You might need to learn how to use heat tools.
Switch up your style and have fun in the sun. Check out this inspiring photo collection to see the most popular summer haircuts you should try!


#1: Textured Silver Pixie with Natural Salt and Pepper
If your hair is fine or low density, this cut will expose your scalp in ways you won’t love. What makes it work here is the texture and volume through the crown, point cut in short layers so the gray and dark strands catch light differently and create an illusion of fullness. Notice how the sides are kept tight to the head while the top has real movement and lift. That contrast is doing all the structural work. Oval and heart face shapes wear this well because the volume sits high, which lengthens the face. Round faces lose that advantage. The natural gray transition is left completely alone, no toner, no blending, and honestly that’s what makes the whole thing look this good against deep skin tones. You will need trims every four weeks without exception.


#2 Chin-Length Soft Bob with Curtain Fringe
If your hair is fine or on the thinner side, this will not look like this on you. That needs to be said first. This bob relies on medium to thick density to get that rounded, full shape at the ends without any stacking or graduation. The cut sits right at the chin with soft interior layers and a curtain fringe that splits just off center, and what I notice is how the ends bend inward naturally, which tells me there’s point cutting happening to remove bulk without losing that weight line. Oval and heart face shapes wear this well. The color is a warm brunette with a few fine, sun-kissed pieces placed only around the face, barely there, the kind of thing that reads as natural light rather than highlights. For anyone with a rounder face, this length will widen you at the exact wrong point.


#3 Undone Jaw-Length Bob with Rooted Blonde
If your hair is fine or on the thinner side, skip this one. That lived-in texture only reads this good on medium to thick density, and the blunt perimeter here is doing real structural work to keep the shape from falling flat. The cut sits right at the jaw with no layering through the length, just point-cut ends that let the pieces separate naturally without looking shaggy. Notice how the root shadow is doing most of the heavy lifting for dimension, with hand-painted highlights concentrated from the mid-shaft down so regrowth stays invisible for months. Oval and heart face shapes wear this length well. Round faces will feel wider at the jaw.


#4 Shoulder-Length Layered Brunette with Curtain-Parted Face Frame
If your hair is fine or low density, skip this one. The whole thing depends on having enough volume to hold that rounded, blown-out shape through the midlengths, and thin hair will just collapse flat against your neck by noon. What makes this cut work is the internal layering, where the weight has been removed from the interior without shortening the perimeter much, so the ends still feel full while the crown lifts. Notice how the shortest face-framing pieces hit right at the cheekbone and kick outward. That’s intentional point cutting, not a blunt line, and it’s what gives the movement around her jaw without looking like a traditional curtain bang. The color reads like a natural medium brunette with a handful of sun-kissed foils concentrated around the front, nothing heavy, probably a partial balayage with a warm caramel tone. It’s the kind of color that grows out clean. This is a genuinely good match for oval and heart-shaped faces because those shorter pieces widen the lower half. Round faces will find it adds width exactly where they don’t want it.


#5 Choppy Ash Blonde Pixie with Rooted Dimension
If your hair is fine or thin, this is the cut that will make people think otherwise. The razor-cut layering through the top creates a piecey, stacked texture that manufactures density where there isn’t much, and the dark root shadow at the base does the rest of the heavy lifting by adding visual depth without any actual volume. Look closely and you’ll notice the sides are tapered tight but not shaved, which keeps the shape clean around the ears while letting that top length fall forward and sideways with real movement. This will not work on thick, coarse hair. It’ll mushroom out and lose every bit of that airy separation. Round faces benefit from the height and asymmetry here, since the longest pieces sweep across the forehead rather than sitting flat. The color is a cool ash blonde, likely a balayage over natural medium brown, and it grows out gracefully for about six weeks before the roots start reading less intentional and more neglected. The cut itself needs reshaping every four to five weeks or it loses its architecture fast.


#6 Warm Copper Shag with Feathered Curtain Bangs
If your hair is fine, walk past this one. The razored interior layers here need medium to thick density to hold that piecey separation without going flat by noon. What caught my eye is how the shortest layers at the crown are doing all the heavy lifting, creating volume that the collarbone-length perimeter just falls away from naturally. The copper tone leans warm and slightly auburn, likely a gloss over highlighted pieces, which is why you’re seeing that dimensional shimmer instead of a single flat shade. Oval and heart faces will love the way those wispy bangs break across the forehead. On a round face, this much width at the cheekbones is going to work against you.


#7 Collarbone Curly Shag with Caramel Ribbon Highlights
If your curls are looser than a 3B, this exact result is not happening for you. The shape here depends on medium-density curls with enough spring to hold those interior layers without going flat or triangular. What caught my eye is how the shortest layers around the crown are cut dry and individually, which is what gives that rounded volume up top instead of weight pooling at the ends. The caramel pieces are hand-painted on stretched curls, placed only where light would naturally catch, so they read warm and dimensional rather than stripy. On a round face this much volume at the sides could work against you. Oval and heart shapes will wear it well. This is a collarbone-length cut when pulled straight, landing a few inches shorter once the curls do their thing. It looks effortless in this photo, and it genuinely can be low-maintenance on the right texture, but if your curl pattern is inconsistent you will fight it constantly.


#8 Windswept Chin-Length Shag with Cool Blonde Dimension
If your hair is fine, look at how much movement this cut creates without any visible product or effort. That’s the whole point. The layers are razor-cut through the crown and sides, short enough to lift away from the head and catch air, which is why it photographs like it has twice the density it probably does. The color is a cool ash blonde with a slightly darker root shadow that keeps it from reading flat or washed out in direct sunlight. This will not work on thick, coarse hair. It will puff out and lose that loose directional movement entirely. Oval and heart-shaped faces wear this well because the wispy pieces at the jawline soften without adding width. One thing worth noting: the longest layers barely graze the collarbone in back while the front sits higher, and that disconnection is doing real work to keep the shape interesting from every angle. You will need a toner refresh every five to six weeks or the cool tones go brassy.


#9 Tucked Ear Brunette Bob with Mushroom Blonde Ribbons
If your hair is fine to medium density, this is one of the best things you can do with it. The internal layers are doing all the work here, creating that rounded shape at the back while the front pieces stay longer and slightly disconnected. Notice how one side is tucked behind the ear and the other falls forward. That asymmetry is intentional and it keeps a simple chin-length bob from looking like a helmet. The color is a cool mushroom brunette base with hand-painted ribbons placed only where the light would catch, which means fewer foils and a more natural grow-out. On thick or coarse hair, this cut will pouf out and lose every bit of that clean line. Oval and heart face shapes wear this length well because it hits right at the jaw without widening anything. If you need your hair to hold a curl or wave for events, know that this blunt perimeter won’t grip texture the way layers would.


#10 Side-Swept Silver Bob with Soft Bend and Dark Root Contrast
The deep side part is doing all the heavy lifting here, and most people won’t notice that. It creates volume across the crown that a center part on this texture would kill instantly. This is a chin-length bob on medium-density hair with a natural wave pattern, and the layers are internal, point-cut to encourage bend without making the ends look thin. If your hair is fine and straight, this shape will go flat by noon. The natural gray and charcoal tones blend so well because nobody touched them with toner, which means the color you see is the color that grew in, darker at the roots fading into bright silver at the mid-lengths. Oval and heart face shapes wear this well. Round faces will feel wider with all that volume sitting right at the jaw. Worth knowing: this cut needs the wave to hold its shape, so if your natural texture won’t cooperate, you’re committing to a round brush every wash day.


#11 Layered Silver Blonde Shag with Sweeping Face Frame
If your hair is fine, this won’t work. The whole structure depends on medium to thick density holding those graduated layers open, and without it you’ll get flatness where you need volume. Look at how the crown lifts naturally here, built by interior layering that starts high and cascades toward collarbone length. The face-framing pieces sweep back rather than falling forward, which is a deliberate choice that keeps the cheekbones open and suits longer or oval face shapes well. On a round face, that swept direction could widen things. The color is natural silver blended with lingering warm blonde at the mid-lengths, likely maintained with a toner rather than heavy foil work. One thing worth noticing: the ends have a soft bend that reads effortless, but that texture was almost certainly set with a large barrel iron and then broken up by hand.


#12 Collarbone Brunette with Sun-Kissed Interior Layers
The color placement here is what caught me. Those warm caramel pieces are concentrated through the interior layers and around the face, leaving the outer canopy a deeper chocolate brown, which is a detail that reads as natural sun exposure rather than a highlight appointment. If your hair is medium density with some natural wave or bend, this cut will cooperate with you. The layers start just below the chin and are point cut to remove weight without creating wispy ends, so the movement stays full and deliberate. On fine hair, this will fall flat by noon. Round and oval faces wear this well because the face-framing pieces break up width right at the cheekbone, and the length below the collarbone keeps everything feeling proportional. One thing worth knowing: this warm brunette tone will shift orange fast if you swim in chlorine and skip a gloss refresh.


#13 Tousled Mid-Length Shag with Warm Brunette Balayage
If your hair is fine or thin, this will not look like this on you. That needs to be said upfront because every client who brings in a photo like this has medium to thick hair with natural wave, and it shows. The layers here are heavily razored through the interior, which is what creates that separated, piecey movement without bulk. Look at how the shortest face-framing pieces land right at the cheekbone and then there’s a significant jump down to the next layer near the chin. That disconnect is intentional and it’s what gives the whole shape its energy. The balayage is subtle, just a few warm caramel pieces concentrated around the face and through the mid-lengths, hand-painted to catch light without reading as “highlights.” On fine hair, those razored layers will fall flat and limp within an hour. On thick, wavy hair, this is one of the most livable summer cuts you can get because texture does the styling for you. Round and oval faces wear this well since the fringe breaks up the forehead while the length at the sides keeps things balanced.


#14 Blended Grey and Blonde Collarbone Bob with Soft Center Part
If your natural grey is coming in cool and ashy, this is the color strategy worth paying attention to. The colorist wove icy blonde foils through the natural silver so there’s no visible line of demarcation, which means the grow-out stays clean for months. The cut itself is a blunt collarbone bob with almost no layering, and that’s exactly what makes it work on medium-density, straight to slightly wavy hair. Notice how the ends are flat-ironed into a slight inward bend rather than left completely blunt, which keeps it from reading harsh against the jawline. This will not work on thick, coarse hair without serious thinning. It will look blocky. Oval and heart-shaped faces wear this length well because it sits right at the collarbone without widening anything. Fine hair is actually your friend here.


#15 Lived-In Blonde Waves with Rooted Curtain Fringe
If your hair is fine, this will not look like this on you. That needs saying upfront because what makes this work is medium to thick density holding a wave pattern without collapsing. The layers are long and internal, point cut to remove bulk without creating visible steps, and the face-framing pieces are barely shorter than chin length, which keeps them from flipping weird as they grow. Look at the root area closely: there’s a good two inches of natural dark blonde shadow that makes the brighter pieces read warm rather than bleached. A colorist likely used teasy lights or heavy foils concentrated at the front hairline with a gentler hand through the back. This cut genuinely suits oval and heart face shapes. Square jaws may find those long curtain pieces draw attention exactly where you don’t want it. The whole thing looks effortless, and it is not. Waves like these on day two require salt spray and some willingness to not touch your hair, which is harder than it sounds.


#16 Polished Jet Black Chin Bob with Invisible Layering
If your hair has any wave or frizz tendency, this will not look like this without daily flat iron work. That needs to be said first. This is a one-length bob sitting right at the chin with internal layers so subtle you’d miss them, but they’re what keep the ends from looking blunt and blocky, letting them curve inward slightly on their own. The deep side part is doing real structural work here, creating that sweep across the forehead that elongates a round or square face. Medium density hair is ideal. Too thick and it poufs at the sides instead of lying flat. Too fine and you lose the body that makes this shape hold. Look at how the ends taper just slightly inward rather than sitting dead straight, which tells me the stylist point-cut into the perimeter to remove weight without sacrificing the clean line. Single-process jet black like this is stunning on warm and deep skin tones, and it photographs like nothing else. On cooler or lighter complexions it can wash you out completely.


#17 Rounded Curly Bob with Warm Cinnamon Color and Shaped Fringe
If your curls are fine or loose waves, this will not look like this on you. That needs to be said first. This shape relies on dense, tightly coiled 3B to 3C texture to hold its rounded silhouette, and the fringe was dry-cut to sit right at the brow line, which means whoever did this understood curl shrinkage down to the centimeter. The color is what got me, though. There’s a warm cinnamon tone painted through the midshaft that catches light differently on every curl, leaving the roots their natural deep brown. It reads as one color from a distance and reveals itself up close. Oval and heart-shaped faces wear this length well because the volume sits at the cheekbones and widens there. Round faces will feel wider. Humidity will make this bigger, not worse, which is rare for a cut to promise honestly. The upkeep on that color placement is real, because regrowth on curly hair shows faster than people expect.


#18 Deep Part Chin Bob with Natural Grey Streaking
Look at where the grey falls here. It concentrates around the temples and along the part line, and whoever cut this knew that and used it, beveling the interior layers so the silver catches light without being blended away. That takes restraint. This is a true chin-length bob on medium density hair, point cut at the ends to remove bulk without thinning it out, and the deep side part does real work opening up the face. Oval and heart shapes will love it. If your face is round and full at the jawline, this length will frame you right at the widest point, and that is not a kind pairing. Fine hair will struggle to hold this shape past noon without product.


#19 Feathered Shoulder Shag with Cool Blonde and Natural Grey Integration
If your hair is fine to medium density, this is one of the best cuts for creating the illusion of fullness without bulk. The layering here is razor-tapered through the mid-lengths, which is what gives those wispy, feathered ends their movement. Look closely at the face frame: those pieces are cut shorter than they appear, sitting just below the cheekbone and kicked outward, which opens up oval and heart-shaped faces beautifully. On a round face, this much width at cheek level will work against you. The color is a cool-toned blonde with her natural grey growing in seamlessly, no harsh root line, which tells me a skilled toner is doing heavy lifting between appointments. This will not look like this on coarse or thick hair. It will read heavy and dated instead of airy.


#20 Flipped-Out Shoulder Cut with Warm Brunette Dimension
Look at the ends. They kick outward, and that’s doing all the work here, creating width at the shoulders and giving the whole shape a sense of movement that most medium-length cuts just don’t have. The layers are interior, cut with a razor or point-cut deep into the mid-lengths, which is why the surface reads smooth while the ends have that separated, piecey flip. If your hair is fine to medium density, this is your cut. Thick hair will fight this shape and turn it into a triangle. The color is a natural brunette base with fine, hand-painted caramel pieces concentrated where the sun would actually hit, and the restraint is what makes it work. One thing most people won’t catch: the face-framing pieces are shorter than the rest of the layers and blend into a barely-there fringe that parts naturally. Oval and heart-shaped faces will love that framing. Round faces, less so, because the volume sits right at cheek level. This cut goes flat fast on day two if you skip product entirely.


#21 Bright Blonde Butterfly Layers with Rooted Warmth
If your hair is fine to medium density, this is the cut that will finally make it look like you have more of it. The layering here is doing real work, with the shortest pieces hitting just below the chin and the longest grazing past the collarbone, all razor-cut to create that disconnected, piecey movement through the mid-lengths. What caught my eye is how the face-framing pieces aren’t symmetrical; one side kicks out wider while the other falls closer to the cheek, and that’s what keeps it from looking too styled. The blonde is a full foil with a shadow root left intentionally warm, maybe a level 7 base melting into icy 10s at the ends. It will not look like this on thick, coarse hair. Thick hair will bulk up where these layers stack and you’ll lose all the airy separation. Round and oval faces wear this well because the long curtain pieces pull everything downward. If you have a narrow face, the volume at the sides and the way the layers flare out can work against you. This is a high-maintenance blonde, and the root will need attention every five to six weeks if you want it this clean.


#22 Sun-Lit Curly Bob with Honey Painted Highlights
If your curls are finer than they look, this will expose that. This cut needs genuine density to hold that rounded shape without going flat at the crown by midday. What caught me is how the highlights were painted onto individual curl clumps rather than traditional foils, which keeps the warmth concentrated on the curl’s outer surface while the deeper base stays dark and rich underneath. Chin to collarbone length, dry cut for sure. It works on oval and heart faces without much thought, and round faces carry it well too because the volume sits high and tapers at the sides. If your curl pattern is 3A or tighter, this is your cut. Looser waves won’t read the same way.


#23 Silver Curly Crop with Tapered Nape and Full Crown Volume
If your curls are fine individually but dense in number, this is the cut that actually works with that combination instead of fighting it. The sides are kept close and the weight lives at the crown, which is why the curls spring upward rather than mushrooming out. Notice how the nape is tapered tight enough that the neck stays clean and open. That detail matters more than people think for round or shorter faces. This is entirely natural silver with no color work, and the variation between bright white and darker pewter strands gives it dimension that dye cannot replicate. If you’re still covering grey and considering stopping, a shape like this makes the transition worth it. It will not work on straight or wavy hair. The entire structure depends on a tight curl pattern holding its own shape, and without that, you’d just have a flat, short cut with nowhere to go.


#24 Long Dark Layers with Subtle Bend and Deep Side Sweep
If your hair is fine or thin, this will not work for you. The whole shape depends on density. Look at how the layers start well below the shoulder and only kick out at the very ends, which means the weight sits heavy through the mid-lengths and you need enough hair to hold that fullness without it going flat. The deep side part is doing quiet structural work here, pushing volume across the crown so the hair falls with that asymmetric drape instead of splitting evenly. One-length it is not, though it reads that way at first glance. There’s careful long layering through the back, point cut into the ends to get that soft, irregular bend without any curl. No color. Just glossy, natural dark hair catching light. That simplicity is the whole point, and it will expose damage immediately.


#25 Flipped Collarbone Layers with Sandy Blonde Dimension
If your hair is fine to medium density, this is the cut that will finally give you the movement you keep asking for. The layers here are razor cut through the mid-lengths, which is why the ends kick out and back instead of falling flat, and that flip happens naturally with a round brush and about four minutes of effort. What caught my eye is the interior layering around the face, shorter pieces tucked just behind the longer curtain fringe that create depth you wouldn’t get from a single-length frame. The color is a warm sandy blonde with lowlights pulled through to keep the root area from reading harsh against the skin. This will not work on thick, coarse hair. The whole structure depends on pieces separating and catching air, and heavy hair just collapses those gaps into a solid wall. Oval and heart face shapes wear this well because the width sits at the jaw and shoulders.


#26 Warm Brunette Shoulder Layers with Copper Foil Accents
If your hair is fine to medium density, this cut will not move like this. That volume through the crown and the way those face-framing pieces kick out with weight behind them requires medium to thick hair, full stop. The layering here is point cut through the interior to remove bulk without losing that rounded shape at the ends, and it’s done well enough that the shortest layers blend into the longer ones without any visible steps. Those copper highlights are placed with foils, not balayage, which you can tell because the color saturation is even on each piece rather than graduated. They catch light in a way that warms brown skin beautifully. Round and square faces both work here because the side-swept fringe creates diagonal movement across the forehead. One thing most people will miss: the layers around her jaw are slightly shorter on the side facing the camera, which opens up the face asymmetrically.


#27: The Wet Bob
The head-turning haircut that has cemented its place as one of the top summer haircut of 2026 is the “The Mid-Wave Hydration.” It rests just above the shoulders, The pièce de résistance of this cutting-edge hairstyle is its signature wet look, achieved with a glossy finish that gives off an enticing, fresh-off-the-beach vibe.


#28: Mid Back-Length Hair with Strawberry Blonde Color
Switch up the average cool blonde for a beautiful, warm strawberry blonde color on your mid-back-length hair. Shades of red and copper are trending and you will definitely want to try one of these shades on your locks. Opting for a strawberry blonde in your style for the summertime will offer the brightness of blonde while also giving a rich warmth to the hair and skin tone. To keep your hair looking fresh, ask your stylist to book you a toner every 4-6 weeks to help rejuvenate the color.


#29 Braided Space Buns for Swimming
This unique hairstyle features two intricately braided space buns, perfect for staying cool and stylish during summer activities, especially swimming in the pool. The braids add texture and interest, making it an ideal pool hairstyle for swimming with medium to thick hair types. This look is fantastic for those with an active lifestyle, keeping hair securely in place while adding a playful twist. However, it requires some skill or assistance to achieve the neatness of the braids and buns. Great for younger individuals or those with a penchant for fun, sporty styles.


#30: Golden Balayage on Mid-Length Hair
Consider trying a golden balayage on mid-length hair if you have a darker, olive, or golden skin tone. Warmer, richer skin tones need warmth in their hair color to best enhance their natural color and features. A golden balayage will look natural and sun-kissed and is extremely easy to maintain, which makes it perfect for people who love low-maintenance hairstyles. Opt for this color if you have brown or hazel eyes, as it will enhance them and make them stand out.


#31: Long Messy Wavy Hair
Long messy hair with beach waves is the quintessential hair cuts of summer. Beach waves in hair embody the days spent in the sun or at the beach which makes it a perfect style for summertime. Keeping your hair long during summer is perfect for people who love low-maintenance styles that can be easily thrown up into a bun or ponytail.


#32: Straight Face-Framing Bangs and Layers
If you have naturally straight hair, try some face-framing bangs and layers to give you a fresh, fun look. Bangs and face-framing layers are a perfect summer style because they help to keep your hair out of your face while also giving you accent pieces to make your ponytail even more beautiful. If blow drying, use a large round brush and roll the hair away from the face to keep your fringe looking perfect and out of your face.


#33: Long Layers and Caramel Highlights
Try long layers with caramel highlights for a natural, refreshing look. Long layers reduce the volume of the hair without having to compromise on the length and give versatility to the style of the hair. Caramel-toned highlights are a warm, rich tone that helps to enhance not only your hair but also your skin and eye colors. Try styling hair into loose curls or waves to enhance the dimension in the highlights and hair.


#34: Warm Peach Wavy Hair
If you like having fun in the sun, consider warm, peach hair with waves. Golden and peach tones are great for enhancing warm, tan skin tones which makes it an ideal summer color. Adding waves will create a beautiful, relaxing, sunset vibe to the hair color. For a more temporary option, try celeb luxury’s viral color shampoo in coral to boost your color at home in the shower.


#35: Sleek Face-Framing Haircut for Straight Hair
Consider trying face-framing layers in your next summer cut if you have straight hair. Starting the face-framing layers at the corner of your mouth and slowly blending into length is universally flattering and will help to enhance your best facial features. This will also help to keep your layers long enough to tuck back or away from the face when needed. Face-framing layers help to add shape and definition to otherwise flat and straight hair.


#36: Razored Shaggy Cut with Heavy Curtain Bangs
A shag haircut with razored texture and curtain bangs is a perfect option for women with a lot of hair. A shag haircut is great at keeping your hair longer while also helping to keep you cool, which makes it a great haircut for summertime. Curtain bangs are the perfect accessory to a shag they blend into the shag while also creating a beautiful silhouette of the face. Try opting for more texture and razoring in your bangs to help keep them light and airy during the summer’s warm months.


#37: Long Bob with Choppy Ends
One beautiful summer haircut is a long bob with choppy ends. Blunt ends are an ideal option for people with fine to medium hair because it helps the hair to look more full. Try adding hidden or internal texture to a long bob to less layering but more movement and volume. Add waves to create an on-trend look for the summer.


#38: Medium-Length Waves on Copper Hair
Try pairing a medium-length summer haircut with a beautiful copper and red tones for a fun and trendy look. A medium length is a great option for women over 40 who like the option of wearing their hair up in a pony or bun or down. Adding loose waves to medium hair will help to give the illusion of volume and dimension to the hair.


#39: Medium Haircut with Textured Ends
If you have medium-length, thicker hair, try out a medium-length cut with textured ends as your next haircut for summer. The texture and thinning on the ends will help to reduce bulk in the hair and help it to lay more smoothly. Ask a stylist to point cut the ends to give a less blunt and more wispy look to the hair.


#40: Tousled Layers for Round Faces
Consider opting for tousled face-framing layers if you have a round or wider face shape. Face-framing layers will not only help hide fine lines and wrinkles but also helps to create a more slim silhouette of the face. Texturized layers help to enhance your natural hair and are great hairstyles for summer because they keep your hair less weighed down and heavy.


#41: Long Blunt Bob with Subtle Waves
A long blunt bob is a great haircut for summertime, especially if you have thin or fine hair. The blunt cut will help to give the illusion of fullness and volume that is usually lacking in finer hair types. Adding subtle waves to a bob helps to show off dimension in the color while also creating more fullness.


#42: Long-Length Haircut with Full Bangs
If you prefer a long-length haircut, try switching it up this summer by adding full bangs. Bangs are perfect to keep hair out of your eyes on sunny days, to create a soft look around your face, and great for accentuating your best facial features. If a full bang is too much for you, try out a more textured or feathered fringe that blends into your layers for a softer look.
Related: Best ways to pair long hair with bangs.


#43: Messy Shoulder-Length Bob
If you tend to wear your hair up during warm weather to stay cool, try a lightweight, messy shoulder-length bob instead. The messy texture adds a lot of movement to the hair while reducing the bulkiness and heaviness of the hair. A bob is one of the ultimate haircuts for the summer because it helps to keep you cool throughout the warm and hot days. Protect your hair from harmful sun damage by using Joico’s Luster Lock Multi-Perfector Daily Shine & Protect Spray.


#44: Jaw-Length Bob on Ginger Red Hair
If you’re looking for a bold and vibrant summer hairstyle, try opting for a chin-length bob in a beautiful shade of ginger red. A bold shade of red or copper can really show off your vibrant personality in a very fun way. If you have a long face shape, a chin-length bob will help to give the illusion of width to your face to balance your features.


#45: Soft Waves on Long U-Cut Hair
Consider trying a u-shaped haircut with soft waves to enhance your long hair. Longer hair gives many options in terms of styles and a u-shaped haircut allows for length in the back while also allowing for framing around the face. Trying out soft waves to help intensify dimension throughout your hair while also giving the illusion of more volume. The soft layers around the face help to make this a versatile hairstyle for summertime.


#46: Spiky Pixie Hair
If you’re looking for a change with the new season, try a spiky pixie haircut. A pixie cut is the perfect summer haircut to keep you nice and cool. Keeping the hair short around the back and sides makes it easy to maintain while keeping length on top makes it easy to create different styles. To create a spiky look, try applying Joico joigel firm styling gel to wet hair and blow-dry to create a stronghold to make your spikes last all day long.


#47: Wavy Bob on Low-Maintenance Grey Hair
If you have naturally gray hair and are looking for a more low-maintenance look, try a wavy bob for your next haircut. A bob haircut is an ideal cut for women over 60 who want a style that is easy and manageable. Ask your stylist to add lots of texture to help enhance the wavy style that you wish to achieve.


#48: Mid-Length Soft Shag
A mid-length soft shag is the perfect haircut if you’re looking to create shape and definition around the face. The face-framing layers around the face are also an ideal accent for women over 50 to hide wrinkles and fine lines. A shag haircut is very on-trend right now and is perfect for giving a youthful look to each client and their hair. If you have fine lines or wrinkles between your brows or forehead, try opting for a fringe that transitions into your shag.


#49: Effortless Brunette Shag with Feathered Bangs
An effortless shag with feathered bangs is a universally fresh cut for the summer. Opting for a shag is perfect for reducing bulk and thickness in the hair while also keeping length. Soft feathered bangs create shape and airiness around your face while also accentuating your best facial features. A lightweight and feathered look is also great to keep you cool during those hot summer months.


#50: Long V-Cut with Beach Waves
Long hair is perfect for every season but adding some beachy waves into a long v-cut is ideal for summer. Long “v” shaped layers help to keep length in the back while also adding framing around the face. Beach waves are an excellent way of showing off dimension in your hair, especially in blonde hair. Try a beach wave summer style by applying sea salt spray to the hair and scrunching to add some natural waves.
Enter your email and get this picture and description straight to your inbox, and you'll also get new hair ideas ❤️
🔒 We don't spam or sell emails. See our Privacy Policy.