Man with a classic high top fade showing a squared flat-top section rising above the head with a tight skin fade on the sides and a sharp lineup

High Top Fade for Men: What It Is and How to Wear It

November 09, 2026

High Top Fade for Men: What It Is and How to Wear It

The high top fade combines a flat, squared-off top section that rises above the natural head silhouette with a tight fade on the sides. It is a visually precise haircut that requires specific maintenance to hold its shape. Here is how it works.

The Structure

The top section is cut to a uniform level above the skull, then shaped flat across the top surface. This is not achieved with clipper guards alone; the barber uses scissors or a flat comb and clipper combination to cut the top surface to a horizontal plane, creating the box-shaped profile. The sides are faded tight, typically to skin or close-to-skin, to create maximum contrast between the flat-topped upper section and the close sides. The combination of a squared top silhouette and tight faded sides is what defines the style.

Classic vs. Modern Versions

The classic high top fade (popularized in the late 1980s and early 1990s) features a pronounced flat top rising 2 to 4 inches above the skull, with a very close or skin fade on the sides. The modern interpretation often reduces the top height (1 to 2 inches) and pairs it with a slightly less extreme side fade, making it more wearable as a daily style while retaining the squared-off silhouette. Some contemporary versions incorporate a low to mid taper rather than a full skin fade, producing a slightly softer version of the classic high contrast look.

What Hair Type It Works Best On

The high top fade works best on natural afro-textured hair (Type 3C to 4C) because the natural coil provides the density and upward growth pattern needed to hold the flat top shape. The hair needs enough volume and height to stand and be cut flat. Men with straight or wavy hair can achieve a flat-top effect, but the hair typically requires heavy product to maintain the shape and lies flat more easily than it stands. The style is fundamentally built around natural hair texture; men with afro-textured hair achieve it with less product intervention.

Maintenance

Every 2 to 3 weeks to maintain the flat surface. The top of the flat section grows out unevenly as different parts of the hair grow at slightly different rates, softening the geometric flatness. Regular trims restore the level top surface. Picks and afro combs are used to lift and maintain the shape of the top section between cuts; product (light cream or pomade) applied before picking helps hold the lifted shape.

Frequently Asked Questions

How tall should a high top fade be?

The height depends on how dramatic you want the style to read and how much natural height your hair can hold. Classic versions at 3 to 4 inches above the skull are a bold statement and require significant density to maintain the flat surface at that height. Modern versions at 1 to 2 inches are more modest and easier to maintain. If you are starting fresh with the style, beginning at a lower height (1 to 1.5 inches) and assessing how well the shape holds before committing to more height is a practical approach. Show reference photos to your barber to confirm the target height before cutting.

Can you get a high top fade with shorter sides instead of a skin fade?

Yes. A high top fade with a close clipper cut on the sides (guard 1 or 1.5) rather than a skin fade is a valid version of the style. The visual contrast between top and sides will be less dramatic than with a skin fade, producing a somewhat softer result. This version also requires slightly less frequent side maintenance since the sides do not need to be brought back to skin; the grow-out is less visually abrupt. If you want the style but prefer lower maintenance or a less severe look, specifying a close taper rather than a skin fade is a direct way to achieve it.

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