Pomade vs. Clay: Which Hair Product Should Men Use?
Pomade vs. Clay: Which Hair Product Should Men Use?
Pomade and clay are the two most common styling products men reach for, and they produce significantly different results. Choosing between them based on your hair type and the look you want is straightforward once you understand what each does.
What Pomade Does
Pomade provides shine and a slicked, controlled finish. It ranges from water-based to oil-based, with water-based options washing out easily and oil-based options providing a stronger hold that is harder to remove. Water-based pomades are the most practical for most men because they wash out with regular shampoo and do not build up. Pomade suits hair that you want to look polished, controlled, and groomed: slick backs, pompadours, comb overs, and side parts. The signature result of pomade is a slightly wet or shiny look that signals intention and structure. Pomade works best on medium-length hair with enough weight to be slicked without frizzing or moving unpredictably.
What Clay Does
Clay provides a matte finish with separation and texture. It adds thickness to fine hair, definition to textured cuts, and a natural-looking hold without shine. Clay is suited to textured crops, messy tops, styles where the hair should look like it is not trying too hard, and any cut where a clean, matte finish is preferred over a polished, shiny one. Clay typically has a medium hold and works well on hair that is 1.5 to 3 inches long. On longer hair, clay can become difficult to distribute evenly. On shorter hair (under 1 inch), the amount needed is minimal and the difference between products becomes less important.
How to Choose
Shiny, controlled finish: pomade. Matte, textured, natural-looking finish: clay. If your haircut is a slick style (swept back, parted, combed), pomade matches the aesthetic. If your haircut is a textured or crop-style cut where you want separation and volume without shine, clay matches the aesthetic. If you are unsure, clay is the more versatile starting point because its matte finish works across more style contexts, and it rarely produces an unintentionally over-styled result.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you mix pomade and clay?
Yes, and many men do. Mixing a small amount of clay with a small amount of water-based pomade produces a product with moderate shine, good texture, and better hold than either used alone. Start with more clay than pomade (roughly 2:1) and adjust based on how much shine and hold you want. This combination works particularly well on medium-length hair that wants some texture and movement but also some structure. The mixing approach eliminates the need to own multiple specialized products.
How much product should men use?
Less than you think. Most men over-apply. A starting amount for short to medium hair is approximately a pea-sized amount. Work it between your palms to emulsify it (spread it across your hands), then distribute from the roots up through the hair. You can always add more if the hold or finish is insufficient; you cannot easily remove product once it is in. Over-application produces a heavy, greasy look regardless of the product quality. The most common reason men dislike a product is using too much, not a mismatch between the product and their hair type.