Man with a modern quiff haircut showing the front section swept upward and to the side with a medium fade on the sides

Men's Quiff Haircut: What It Is and How to Get It Right

November 05, 2026

Men's Quiff Haircut: What It Is and How to Get It Right

The quiff sits between the pompadour and the side part in terms of structure. It uses less extreme height than the pompadour and more front volume than a standard side-parted style. Understanding what defines it and how it differs from adjacent styles helps you communicate what you want at the barbershop.

What Defines the Quiff

The quiff is characterized by hair at the front and top of the head styled upward and slightly to one side, creating a soft peak or ridge at the front that sweeps back. Unlike the pompadour, which sweeps straight back from the hairline and creates height primarily at the forehead, the quiff has a more diagonal sweep, often partially to the side as well as back. The front section is the focal point. The sides are typically shorter than the top, creating a contrast that frames the front section; modern quiffs almost always pair the top with faded or closely cut sides.

Quiff vs. Pompadour

The pompadour sweeps straight back from the hairline with maximum height at the front. It has a formal, dramatic quality. The quiff sweeps at an angle (back and to one side), has less height, and reads as less formal and more contemporary. The pompadour is typically more product-heavy and more precisely styled; the quiff works with lighter products and a slightly undone, textured finish. The structural difference is in the direction and height of the front section: pompadour = straight back, high; quiff = angled, moderate height.

Hair Length Requirements

The quiff requires 2 to 4 inches of length at the front and crown to produce the signature sweep and volume. At 2 inches, you get a low, subtle quiff with a defined front ridge. At 3 to 4 inches, the quiff has more substance and movement. The sides can range from a short fade (low or mid) to a blended clipper cut; most contemporary quiff wearers opt for a mid fade to create a clean contrast between the longer top and shorter sides.

Styling the Quiff

Apply a medium-hold clay or matte pomade to damp hair. Blow dry the front section upward and to the side while pushing it back from the hairline; use the heat and direction together to set the sweep. Once dry, add a small additional amount of product to define the front ridge. The quiff does not require the heavy product load of the classic pompadour; the textured, slightly undone finish that most contemporary quiffs use is achieved with lighter products applied sparingly.

Frequently Asked Questions

What face shapes suit the quiff?

The quiff adds height and diagonal volume at the front, which creates visual length and draws attention upward. It suits round and square faces well because it elongates and adds dimension without adding side volume. Oval and heart-shaped faces work with most quiff variations. For oblong or rectangular faces (already visually long), a lower-profile quiff that does not add significant height is the better version; the dramatic high quiff on an oblong face further extends an already long profile.

Is the quiff high maintenance?

It requires daily styling effort to maintain the front sweep and volume; you cannot roll out of bed with a quiff already in place. The styling process takes 5 to 10 minutes with a blow dryer and product. The haircut itself needs touching up every 4 to 6 weeks; the sides if faded need maintenance at 3 to 4 weeks. The daily styling commitment is the primary maintenance requirement: if you are not willing to use a blow dryer in the morning, the quiff is harder to maintain than styles that require no daily direction work.

Can curly hair wear a quiff?

Yes. Curly hair produces a textured, voluminous version of the quiff that uses the natural curl body to achieve the front volume. The styling process for curly quiff hair involves applying a curl cream or light hold product to define the front section, then using the blow dryer with a diffuser to set the direction and volume without disturbing the curl pattern. The result is a softer, more organic version of the quiff shape than straight hair produces, with the curl texture adding visual interest to the front section.

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