Professional barber using thinning shears on male client with thick hair to remove bulk and add movement to haircut at barbershop

Thinning Shears: What They Do and When Barbers Use Them

September 15, 2026

Thinning Shears: What They Do and When Barbers Use Them

Thinning shears are scissors with one or both blades serrated (notched with evenly spaced teeth) rather than smooth. When a thinning shear closes, the teeth remove some of the hair in each cut while leaving other hairs at the original length. The net effect: reduced bulk and density in a section without visibly removing overall length the way a blunt cut would.

Why They Are Used

Thinning shears address two problems: excess bulk (hair that is too dense and heavy, making the cut appear shapeless) and the blunt, solid ends that can result from straight scissor cuts on certain hair types. For men with very thick, coarse hair, thinning shears remove the weight that makes the hair sit flat and heavy. For men with medium hair that has a "helmet" or puffed-out appearance at certain lengths, thinning creates movement and airiness in the section.

What They Do Not Do

Thinning shears do not significantly reduce length. They are not the right tool if you want the hair shorter — that requires regular scissors or clippers. They also do not work well on fine or thin hair — removing density from hair that is already low density creates gaps and sparse sections.

Thinning Shears vs. Texturizing Shears

These terms are used interchangeably in some contexts but refer to different tools. Thinning shears have finer, more closely spaced teeth and are designed specifically for removing bulk. Texturizing shears have wider-spaced, larger teeth and remove more hair per cut, creating more pronounced texture. Both are used for similar purposes but produce different degrees of effect.

CADMEN Training

Scissor technique and advanced finishing are core to CADMEN's barbering curriculum. academy.cadmen.ca/in-person-training.

Frequently Asked Questions

What do thinning shears do to hair?

Thinning shears selectively remove some hairs from a section while leaving others at full length. The serrated blade (one blade has evenly spaced teeth; the other is typically a straight blade) functions as a comb that cuts only the hairs that fall between its teeth. When the shears close, roughly 30 to 50 percent of the hairs in the section are cut at that point; the remaining hairs pass through the spaces in the teeth uncut and remain at full length. The effect on the hair section: reduced density — fewer hairs per section means less overall volume and bulk. This is useful for hair that is too dense and heavy for the desired cut profile. Reduced weight — the section becomes lighter, which allows it to move more freely. Very dense hair can sit flat under its own weight; thinning allows the shorter underlayer to support the outer layer with less overall mass pressing down. Improved movement and texture — the mix of full-length and shorter hairs in the section creates a more varied texture that moves more naturally than a uniform blunt section. This is particularly beneficial for cuts where organic movement and texture are part of the style. The visual result from outside the head: the overall length appears unchanged because the longest hairs remain at full length. From a distance, a thinned section looks the same length as an unthinned section. The difference is in how it sits — less bulky, less rigid, more natural movement. Who benefits: men with thick, heavy, coarse hair who want more movement without losing length. Men with dense hair that creates a "box" or "mushroom" silhouette at certain lengths. Who does NOT benefit: men with fine or thin hair (thinning already sparse hair creates visible gaps). Men who want the actual length reduced (use regular scissors or clippers instead).

Will thinning shears damage hair?

Thinning shears do not damage hair when used correctly by a skilled barber, but improper use can create problems. What correct use looks like: thinning shears are used on dry or slightly damp hair (not soaking wet — the weight of wet hair makes accurate assessment of density difficult). They are used in the mid-section and ends of the hair, not near the roots. Using thinning shears at the scalp level creates very short, disconnected hairs that can stick up uncontrollably when the hair dries. The barber uses them judiciously — checking after each pass and removing only as much density as is needed to achieve the desired effect, not over-thinning in a single session. What can go wrong: over-thinning — removing too much density creates thin, sparse sections. This is permanent until the thinned hairs grow back to full length, which takes months. A barber who over-thins hair does real visible damage that cannot be quickly corrected. Using them too close to the scalp — creating stubby short hairs at the root level that stand up and create the appearance of damaged, flyaway hair throughout the growth cycle. Using them on fine hair — thinning already low-density hair creates visible gaps that look damaged. The "damaged" look from thinning shears: most clients who feel their hair was damaged by thinning shears either had too much removed, had the shears used too close to the roots, or had fine hair that was not a good candidate for the tool. In skilled hands on appropriate hair types, thinning shears are a routine finishing tool that produces a better result than scissors alone for dense, heavy hair.

Should I ask my barber to use thinning shears?

Whether to ask for thinning shears depends on your hair type and what problem you want to solve. You should ask for thinning shears (or they should be part of the service) if: your hair is very thick and heavy and consistently appears bulky at the sides or on top regardless of the cut. You have dense hair that "puffs" out at certain lengths or that holds no movement — it just sits as a solid mass. You want the overall length to stay the same but want the hair to move more naturally and have more texture. You have a specific section that consistently looks too heavy and drags the cut out of proportion. You should NOT ask for thinning shears if: your hair is fine or thin. Removing more density is counterproductive. You want the actual length of the hair reduced — thinning shears will not achieve this the way scissors or clippers do. You want very precise, uniform texture throughout the cut — thinning shears create a randomized texture that does not produce uniform results. The better approach: rather than prescribing the tool, describe the problem to your barber. "My hair is very thick and it ends up looking boxy on the sides after a few weeks" or "the top section is so heavy it just lies flat — I want more movement" gives your barber the information to decide whether thinning shears or another technique is the right solution. An experienced barber will reach for thinning shears when appropriate without needing to be asked if you describe the problem accurately.

Back to Blog