Close-up of a mans crown area showing a visible cowlick where the hair grows in a circular or opposing direction creating a stubborn section that resists styling

How to Deal With a Cowlick: Men's Guide to Managing Stubborn Growth Patterns

November 16, 2026

How to Deal With a Cowlick: Men's Guide to Managing Stubborn Growth Patterns

A cowlick is a section of hair that grows in a different direction from the surrounding hair, creating a spiral, spike, or opposing flow that resists lying flat. Most men have at least one; common locations are the crown, the hairline at the forehead, and the neckline. Cowlicks are permanent features of your growth pattern and cannot be removed, but they can be managed with the right cut and styling approach.

Why They Happen

Cowlicks are caused by the angle at which the hair follicle is positioned in the scalp. When a follicle is angled differently from surrounding follicles, the hair it produces grows in a different direction. This is genetic and fixed at birth; the follicle angle does not change. The effect is most visible when the hair is long enough to show directional growth but short enough not to be weighed down by its own length. At very short lengths (guard 1 or shorter), cowlicks are less visible because there is not enough hair to see the directional difference. At medium lengths (2 to 4 inches), they are typically most pronounced.

Haircut Approaches That Work

Work with the direction, not against it. A skilled barber will identify your cowlick's direction and cut the surrounding hair to flow into or around it rather than trying to cut the cowlick section flat in a direction it will not stay. At the crown: a cowlick at the crown typically means the hair needs to be cut to allow it to spiral or part naturally; forcing a flat, uniform direction in that area creates a section that perpetually sticks up. A barber can cut the crown section shorter to reduce the lift while leaving enough length that the surrounding hair lies over it. At the hairline: a cowlick at the forehead hairline often responds well to a part that works with the cowlick's direction rather than a part that cuts across it.

Styling Approaches

Blow dry with a brush: directing the cowlick's section with a brush while using heat can temporarily train the hair to lie in a different direction. This works best when the blow dry is followed immediately by product applied while the hair is still warm. The effect lasts for most of a day. Product: a medium-hold clay or paste applied to the cowlick section while the hair is damp gives the most control without looking stiff. Heavy wax can hold a cowlick flat but feels heavy and looks forced.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a cowlick be permanently fixed?

Not through haircut or styling. Chemical straightening treatments (relaxers, Japanese straightening) can temporarily reduce the directional difference by straightening the hair shaft, but these affect the hair texture throughout, not just the cowlick section. The follicle's angle does not change with any treatment. The practical path is learning to work with it: choose a haircut that accommodates the cowlick's direction, learn the styling sequence that keeps it managed, and consider it a fixed variable to design around rather than a problem to solve.

Do cowlicks get worse as you age?

They become more noticeable with hair thinning. A cowlick in a dense head of hair is somewhat camouflaged by surrounding hair. As density decreases with age, the same cowlick becomes more visible because there is less surrounding hair to lie over and around it. The growth angle of the cowlick itself does not change; its appearance changes based on the amount of surrounding hair available to moderate its effect. Men experiencing thinning at the crown in addition to a cowlick typically benefit from shorter lengths at the crown to reduce the lift effect.

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