How to Cut a Side Part Haircut: Classic Technique for a Timeless Style
How to Cut a Side Part Haircut: Classic Technique for a Timeless Style
The side part is one of the most requested professional haircuts in Canadian barbershops: clean, versatile, appropriate for workplace and formal contexts, and adaptable across hair types. The style has no single fixed length or fade depth; it is defined by the part line on one side, the shorter tapered or faded sides, and the length through the top that creates the swept side profile. Understanding the variables in this family of cuts lets a barber serve every client's version of the style rather than cutting a single generic interpretation.
Establishing the Part
The part line can be: natural (following the hair's natural growth direction), razored (a sharp, defined line cut with a trimmer or razor), or combed-only (implied by the direction of the styling without a cut line). Confirm which the client wants before cutting. A razored part creates a graphic, defined look; a natural part produces a softer, more organic result; a combed-only part is the most conservative option and requires no cutting decision on the part itself.
For a razored part: find the natural growth swirl or the client's preferred part position. Use the tip of a fine-tooth comb to draw the part line from front to back while the hair is damp. Use the trimmer at 0 guard or a straight razor to cut a clean line along the part. The part should be a single, consistent line, not a groove; the width of the parted section on each side is determined by styling direction, not the cut itself.
The Sides
The sides of a side part can be: skin faded, low/mid/high faded, or tapered without reaching skin. The standard conservative side part has a low or mid taper (ending at a 1 or 2 guard near the hairline); the contemporary version often has a higher skin fade that creates stronger disconnection and contrast.
Confirm the fade height and closeness preference. The side part's visual character changes significantly between a conservative low taper and a high skin fade on the same head of hair; do not assume which version the client wants based on the request alone.
The Top
The top length is what the client will comb or style to one side. Typical lengths: 1.5 to 3 inches of length through the top section, enough to comb cleanly from the part across the head. Use scissors to cut the top section, removing length to the client's target while maintaining the direction from part to the opposite side.
Point cut the ends of the top section to add texture and prevent the hair from flipping out at the ends. Flat ends on a side part create a boxy silhouette that disrupts the flowing profile of the style; textured ends allow the hair to sweep and lie naturally.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a side part and a comb over?
A side part has the hair parted on one side with both sides of the top section lying relatively flat. A comb over sweeps a larger volume of hair from one side to the other, covering the transition between the short sides and the top. The comb over has more top volume and a more dramatic side sweep; the side part is more balanced and less dramatic. Both involve a part line and swept-back top sections; the comb over moves the top hair directionally across the head while the side part divides and directs each half to its own side.
What products work best for a side part haircut?
Water-based pomades provide the hold and shine that make a side part look clean and defined. Light to medium clay works for clients who want a more natural, matte finish. The key product property for a side part is hold with comb-ability: the product needs to hold the swept direction through the day while still allowing the comb-through at the start of styling. Stiff or sticky products that lock the hair in place immediately make the part impossible to comb cleanly. Medium-hold, flexible-finish products allow the precise comb direction the style requires.