Best Haircuts for Men With a Diamond Face Shape
Best Haircuts for Men With a Diamond Face Shape
The diamond face shape is characterized by wide cheekbones paired with a narrower forehead and a narrow, pointed chin. It is one of the less common face shapes and requires a different approach than round or square face recommendations because the widest point is in the middle rather than at the top or jaw.
The Diamond Face Challenge
The wide cheekbones are the dominant feature. Haircuts that add width at the forehead level or fullness at the chin level help balance the wide middle. Styles that emphasize the cheekbones (skin fades that remove all side hair, creating contrast at cheekbone level) draw attention to the widest point. Adding volume or width at the forehead and reducing the extreme point of the chin through beard fullness produces the most balanced overall shape.
Styles That Work
Volume at the forehead: a textured top with some width and lift at the front adds visual mass where the diamond face is narrower. A side part or a slight quiff worn low and forward (not high and backward) adds forehead presence. Natural tapers or low fades rather than high skin fades: keeping some side hair at the cheekbone level reduces the exposure of the wide cheekbone point. Medium length with side volume: hair that falls to the sides at cheekbone level rather than being clipped short creates a continuous line that draws less attention to the wideness of the cheekbones.
Beard Consideration
A beard with fullness at the chin and jaw level adds mass where the diamond face is narrow, counterbalancing the wide cheekbones. A full beard kept longer at the chin than the sides creates a rounder, more balanced overall silhouette. A short stubble or goatee does less to compensate for the narrow chin than a fuller beard style.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are skin fades bad for a diamond face shape?
Not inherently bad, but they emphasize the wide cheekbones more than fade styles that leave more hair at the sides. If you want a fade, a low to mid taper (not a skin fade) keeps more hair at the sides at cheekbone level, reducing the contrast that draws attention to the widest point of the face. A skin fade with a longer, fuller top that adds forehead volume partially compensates for the removed cheek-level hair. The tradeoff depends on how prominent your cheekbones are and how much you want to minimize that feature.
How common is a diamond face shape?
Diamond faces are less common than oval, round, or square shapes. Many men identified as having a diamond face shape actually have a heart face (wide forehead, narrower chin, similar proportions but the wideness is at the top rather than the middle) or an inverted triangle shape. The key distinction is whether the widest point is clearly at the cheekbones or at the forehead. True diamond faces have the widest point distinctly at the cheekbone level with both the forehead and chin clearly narrower. If unsure, measuring facial width at forehead, cheekbones, and jaw is more reliable than visual estimation alone.