Work with Your Shape, Not Against It
A round face has beautiful curves. Full cheeks. Soft jawline. Equal width and length. The goal of a flattering haircut is not to hide your roundness — it is to balance it. To add vertical lines where your face has horizontal ones. To create angles that complement your curves.
The wrong short haircut can make a round face look wider. The right one can make it look longer, leaner, and more sculpted. I have cut short hairstyles for round faces of clients for years. Here are 15 styles that work.
1. The High-Rise Pixie

A pixie with significant height at the crown. The vertical lift adds length to your face.
The right approach: Ask for maximum height at your crown. The sides should be short and close.
How to describe it: “I want a high-rise pixie. Height at my crown. Short sides. The lift should lengthen my face.”
What to skip: A flat crown. Height is essential.
2. The Deep Side Pixie

A pixie with a deep side part and all the hair swept to one side. The diagonal line creates length.
The right approach: Ask for a deep side part. The longer side should reach your opposite eyebrow.
How to describe it: “I want a deep side pixie. Deep part. Swept to my right. The diagonal line should elongate my face.”
What to skip: A center part. That emphasizes roundness.
3. The Wedge Bob

A classic wedge with stacked layers at the back. The stack creates height and the angle creates length.
The right approach: Ask for a soft wedge. The back should be stacked. The front should hit your chin.
How to describe it: “I want a wedge bob. Stacked in back. Longer in front. The angle should flatter my round face.”
What to skip: A severe wedge. Soft is better.
4. The Angular Bob

A bob with sharp, clean angles. The corners are visible. The shape is architectural.
The right approach: Ask for an angular perimeter. The corners should be sharp, not rounded.
How to describe it: “I want an angular bob. Sharp corners. Architectural shape. The angles should balance my round face.”
What to skip: A soft, rounded bob. Angular is the opposite.
5. The Pixie with Long Top

All the length concentrated on top (3-4 inches). The sides are very short. The height on top adds vertical length.
The right approach: Ask for a #2 guard on the sides. The top should reach your forehead.
How to describe it: “I want a pixie with a long top. Very short sides. Long top. The height should lengthen my face.”
What to skip: A top that is too heavy. Texture is still important.
6. The Side-Swept Bob

A chin-length bob with all the hair swept to one side. The sweep creates a diagonal line.
The right approach: Ask for a deep side part. The hair should be swept completely to one side.
How to describe it: “I want a side-swept bob. Deep part. All hair to my right. The diagonal line adds length.”
What to skip: A bob that sits evenly on both sides.
7. The Asymmetrical Pixie (Dramatic)

One side is significantly longer than the other. The dramatic difference creates a strong diagonal line.
The right approach: Ask for a two-inch difference between the two sides. The longer side should hit your cheekbone.
How to describe it: “I want a dramatic asymmetrical pixie. Two inches longer on my left. Strong diagonal line.”
What to skip: A subtle asymmetry. Dramatic means noticeable.
8. The Tapered Crop

Very short on the sides and back. Short but textured on top. The taper removes width from the sides.
The right approach: Ask for a tight taper on the sides. The top should be choppy and piece-y.
How to describe it: “I want a tapered crop. Tight on the sides. Choppy on top. The taper should narrow my face.”
What to skip: Wide, puffy sides. Taper means narrow.
9. The Diagonal Bangs Cut

Bangs that are cut on a severe diagonal. The diagonal line cuts across your forehead.
The right approach: Ask for diagonal bangs. The shortest point should be at your center part. The longest at your temple.
How to describe it: “I want diagonal bangs. Cut on an angle. The diagonal line should add length to my face.”
What to skip: Straight-across bangs. Those make round faces look wider.
10. The Sculpted Undercut

An undercut with sculpted, geometric shapes. The sharp lines add angles to your silhouette.
The right approach: Ask for a geometric undercut. Lines should be clean and intentional.
How to describe it: “I want a sculpted undercut. Geometric shapes. Sharp lines. The angles balance my round face.”
What to skip: Soft, organic shapes. Sculpted means geometric.
11. The Lifted Crown Bob

A bob with extra volume concentrated at the crown. The height at the top adds length.
The right approach: Ask for layers that lift at your crown. The crown should be the fullest part.
How to describe it: “I want a lifted crown bob. Volume at my crown. The height should lengthen my face.”
What to skip: A flat crown. Lift is essential.
12. The Pixie with Tapered Sides

Short on the sides and back, with the sides tapered very close to your head. Removes width.
The right approach: Ask for a tight taper on the sides. The top should have length.
How to describe it: “I want a pixie with tapered sides. Close on the sides. Length on top. The taper narrows my face.”
What to skip: Sides that stick out. Tapered means close.
13. The Diagonal Stacked Bob

A stacked bob where the stack is cut on a diagonal. The angle adds length.
The right approach: Ask for a diagonal stack. The stack should be higher on one side than the other.
How to describe it: “I want a diagonal stacked bob. Angled stack. The diagonal line should elongate my face.”
What to skip: A straight-across stack. Diagonal means angled.
14. The Razor-Cut Pixie

A pixie cut with a razor for soft, feathered ends. The softness takes away harshness.
The right approach: Ask for razor cutting. The ends should be soft and feathered, not blunt.
How to describe it: “I want a razor-cut pixie. Soft, feathered ends. Not blunt. Softness around my face.”
What to skip: Blunt, heavy ends. Razor means soft.
15. The Asymmetrical Bob with Undercut

One side is longer, the other side is shaved. Maximum contrast. Maximum vertical line.
The right approach: Ask for a #2 undercut on one side. The other side should be chin-length or longer.
How to describe it: “I want an asymmetrical bob with an undercut. Shaved on my right. Long on my left. Strong diagonal.”
What to skip: A subtle asymmetry. Go big or go home.
What to Avoid for Round Faces
Round shapes with no height. That adds to roundness.
Center parts. They widen your face.
Blunt bangs at eyebrow level. They shorten your face.
Fullness at the cheeks. That adds width.
What to Tell Your Stylist
Bring a photo from the 15 above. Say: “I have a round face. I want a short haircut that adds length. I need height at my crown and narrow sides.”
The Final Word
A round face is beautiful. The right short haircut enhances that beauty by adding length and angles. High-rise pixies. Deep side parts. Wedge bobs. Angular cuts. Asymmetrical styles. Fifteen options. One of them is yours. Bring a photo. Get the flattering cut you deserve.