Textured haircuts are still everywhere, and for once the popularity makes sense. A good textured cut gives the hair movement, shape, and some life without making it look stiff or overloaded with product. Done properly, it looks easy. Done badly, it looks like the barber attacked the top with thinning scissors and hoped for the best.
That is the split.
A lot of men ask for texture now because they do not want flat hair. That’s fair enough. Flat hair usually looks dead. But “textured” is not one haircut, and this is where men get lazy. Some textured haircuts are sharp. Some are soft. Some are low-effort. Some are a daily job. Some work on almost anyone. Some fall apart the second the density, hairline, or styling effort stops cooperating.
This list is about the textured haircuts that still look good in 2026, and the ones men should think twice about before they sit in the chair.
30 Textured Haircuts for Men That Still Look Good
Some of these are easy wins. Some are overrated. The difference usually comes down to hair type, density, and whether the cut still works once you leave the barber’s chair.
Textured Crop with Skin Fade
This is still one of the strongest short textured haircuts a man can get. The skin fade keeps the sides brutally clean, while the textured crop has enough breakup to stop the haircut looking too bare or too stiff.
It works because the contrast is doing real work. The danger is going too short on top. Once that happens, the whole thing starts looking harsh instead of sharp.
Short Textured Quiff
A short textured quiff gives you lift at the front without drifting into full quiff territory. That is exactly why it works. You get shape without turning the haircut into a styling project.
I would put this high on the list for men who want a short hairstyle with a bit more presence. If the front is weak, though, stop forcing it. A tired quiff looks worse than no quiff at all.
Textured Fringe
The textured fringe pushes attention forward and breaks up the front of the haircut. That makes it useful for men who want something current without looking too polished or too fixed.
This is one of the smarter options when the hairline is not perfect but the front still has enough density to work with. If the fringe is weak, it does not look relaxed. It looks flimsy.
Curly Textured Top
This works because it lets curls behave like curls instead of flattening them into something lifeless. The shorter sides keep the shape under control, and the texture on top does not need to be manufactured because it is already there.
If your curls have real shape, this cut can look excellent. If they are patchy, dry, or inconsistent, it can turn messy very quickly. Not every curly top deserves to be called stylish.
Textured Crew Cut
A textured crew cut is one of the safer modern updates to a classic short haircut. The top stays compact, but not so uniform that it looks dead.
For a lot of men, this is the sweet spot. Short enough to be easy, textured enough to avoid looking plain. If you want grit without drama, this is one of the best places to land.
Spiky Textured Cut with High Fade
This one is louder, sharper, and much less forgiving than some men think. The high fade strips the sides down fast, and the spiky top makes the whole cut more obvious.
It can still work, but I would not call it a safe choice. On the wrong man, it starts looking dated very quickly. This is one of those cuts barbers post more than real men should get.
Short Messy Waves
This is the kind of haircut that works because it does not try to over-control naturally wavy hair. The top stays loose and broken up, while the shorter sides stop the haircut from spreading too wide.
A lot of men with waves should be looking at this instead of trying to force their hair into cleaner, flatter shapes that never really suit them. The mess has to look cut on purpose, though. Lazy is not the same thing as relaxed.
Buzz Cut with Textured Top
This gives you the honesty of a buzz cut, but with enough variation on top to stop it looking too raw. It is still very short, but not completely lifeless.
I like this one because it does not pretend to be more than it is. Minimal effort. Minimal nonsense. Just enough texture to stop the haircut looking dead on arrival.
Medium Length Textured Quiff
This is for men who want some actual movement and are willing to style it. The extra length on top gives the front more lift and more range, while the shorter sides stop it from turning into a puffed-up mess.
It can look excellent, but only if you put some effort in. If you want something that falls into place on its own, this is not the cut.
Textured Comb Over with Faded Sides
A good textured comb over keeps the top moving naturally instead of pinning it into one fixed direction. That is why it still works. It has direction without looking too neat.
Done right, it looks calm and sharp. Done badly, it starts drifting toward the kind of haircut that looks like it is trying to rescue more hair than it really has.
Textured Side Part Fade
This keeps some of the order of a side part but takes the stiffness out of it with texture through the top. That alone makes it better than the flatter, more polished versions too many men still ask for.
It works best when the part is not overemphasized. Once the part starts looking too sharp, the haircut loses the relaxed edge that makes it worth getting in the first place.
Textured Slick Back with Faded Sides
A slick back with texture is a much smarter move than a classic flat, shiny version that sits there like a helmet. The top still moves, which stops the whole thing from looking too severe.
This works best when the hair still has enough density to push back properly. If the front is weak, do not pretend texture is going to save it. It will not.
Medium-Length Layered Texture
This is one of the better options for men who want movement without committing to long hair. The layering gives the haircut shape and softness without letting it turn heavy or shapeless.
It suits hair that still has some body to it. If the hair is limp, this does not look effortless. It looks tired.
Medium Pompadour
A medium pompadour can still look excellent, but only when the hair has enough thickness and lift to earn it. When that is there, the shape looks strong and controlled without turning theatrical.
When it is not there, this cut looks stupid fast. Weak front density and pompadours do not mix, no matter how many product recommendations get thrown at the problem.
Medium Textured Side Swept Hair
This is a strong option for men who want the hair to move naturally to one side without locking it into a formal hairstyle. It looks easier, which is exactly why it works.
It sits in a very good middle ground. Not too sharp. Not too loose. A lot of men would suit this better than the cleaner, more fixed side-part variations they keep asking for.
Medium-Length Shag
A textured shag can look very good, but only when the hair has enough life in it to carry the shape. It needs movement, layering, and some actual body.
When it works, it feels loose and current. When it does not, it looks like the haircut never got finished. This one gets oversold hard.
Long Layered Waves
Long layered waves are strong when the hair has enough natural bend and enough density to stop the length from turning heavy. The layers are there to keep it moving, not just to make it look less flat.
I would only go here if the hair really earns it. Long hair with weak density almost always looks worse in real life than it does in a photo.
Long Textured Flow
This is the haircut a lot of men want when they say they want longer hair that still feels controlled. It moves, but it still has shape. That is what separates it from just letting the hair grow out and hoping it somehow looks intentional.
If the hair does not have enough thickness, this falls apart quickly. The cut is good. The wishful thinking that often comes with it is not.
Long Tousled Curls
This works because the curls create the texture naturally. The haircut just needs enough structure to stop the whole thing from turning into bulk and drift.
Done well, it looks expressive without looking chaotic. Done badly, it looks like a man lost interest halfway through trying to look put together.
Long Slicked Back Hair
This is one of the riskier long textured styles because the second you push the hair back, every weak area becomes visible. That said, when the density is still strong, it can look excellent.
I would only recommend this when the front and crown are both solid. Otherwise it starts exposing more than it flatters, and no amount of styling is going to save that.
Textured Curtains
Textured curtains still work when the front and mid-lengths have enough density to carry them. The layering helps stop the shape from going too flat or too heavy, which is why this style still gets so much attention.
That does not mean it suits everyone. Social media loves this cut more than real life does. Weak density through the front ruins it very quickly.
Long Shag with Texture
A long shag relies on layering, movement, and some controlled roughness. That is what gives it character. It should not look tidy, but it also cannot look accidental.
This suits men who actually want something more expressive. If the hair lacks body, though, this turns limp faster than men want to admit.
Surfer-Inspired Long Texture
This is the kind of haircut men like because it looks easy. The problem is that easy-looking haircuts are usually the hardest ones to pull off. The shape still has to be there underneath.
When the layering is right, it looks loose without looking neglected. When the shape is weak, it just looks like overgrown hair with better branding.
Textured Man Bun with Loose Strands
This only works when the hair is strong enough to justify being pulled back and there is enough texture left around it to stop it feeling too severe. The loose strands are what stop it from looking too forced.
I would not call this a go-to option. On the right man, it works. On the wrong one, it looks like a last resort.
Textured Faux Hawk Fade
This cut still has punch, but it is easier to live with than a full mohawk. The center strip stays lifted and broken up, while the faded sides keep the whole thing from tipping into costume territory.
It works best for men who actually want something sharper and more obvious. If that is not your taste, there are better textured cuts with less risk attached.
Textured Mullet Fade
The modern textured mullet works because the fade stops it from feeling too old or too chaotic. The crown and back keep the length, but the sides pull the whole thing back into shape.
This cut is not for most men, and pretending otherwise is stupid. On the right head, it looks excellent. On the wrong one, it looks like a mistake.
Textured Mohawk
A textured mohawk is bold by default. The central strip needs movement and shape, and the sides need to stay sharp enough that the whole thing looks intentional rather than half-finished.
This is not for a man who wants subtlety. If you do not actually want that attention, do not get a mohawk and then act surprised by it.
Textured Crop with Burst Fade
This is one of the sharper modern crop variations. The burst fade curves around the ear and gives the top more presence without needing extra length.
It is a strong option if you want a crop that feels more current than a standard fade. The shape does a lot of the work here, which is exactly why it stands out.
Hard Part Textured Fade with Hair Design
This version adds a hard part and etched detail to an already high-contrast haircut. It is very precise, very visible, and definitely not subtle.
Some men can carry it. A lot more think they can. Most would be better off with less going on.
Disconnected Textured Undercut
The disconnected undercut still works because the break between the top and sides is so obvious. The texture up top stops it looking too flat, while the clipped sides keep all the attention where it is meant to be.
This cut suits men who actually want contrast. If you want something quieter or more natural, this is the wrong haircut and there is no point pretending otherwise.
Are Textured Haircuts Right for You?
Textured haircuts work best when they are working with the hair, not trying to rescue it. Thick hair usually handles texture well because it has enough density to keep the separation visible. Wavy and curly hair often suit it naturally because the movement is already there. Straight hair can still look excellent, but the cut has to do more of the work.
Routine matters too. Some textured haircuts are almost effortless. Others only look right once product and styling come into it. The mistake is asking for a textured style that suits your photos, not your actual hair or daily habits.
The Best Products for Textured Haircuts
The product should support the haircut, not take it over.
Sea salt spray works well on short to medium textured styles when you want lift and some dryness without heavy hold. Hair clay is stronger and suits thicker hair or sharper styles where grip matters more. Matte pomade is useful when you want more control without a shiny finish. Styling cream is the better call for medium to long textured cuts that need softness and movement instead of grip. Texturizing powder can help fine hair, but it is easy to overdo and make the hair feel dusty or overworked.
If a textured haircut only looks good once you have emptied half a product jar into it, the cut is not doing its job.
A Few Straight Answers
If you are still weighing it up, these are the questions that usually matter once the haircut itself is out of the way.
How do men get textured hair?
It starts with the haircut. Barbers use layering, point cutting, razoring, and selective weight removal to create movement and separation. Product helps, but it should never be doing all the work.
What does texturizing do to hair?
It removes bulk, breaks up blunt lines, and gives the hair more movement. That helps the haircut feel less flat and more lived-in.
Can thin hair be textured?
Yes, but it has to be done carefully. Too much taken out of thin hair makes it look weaker. Done properly, texture can create the impression of more lift and fullness.
Can barbers add texture to a haircut?
Yes, that is exactly what they are doing when they point cut, razor, or remove weight in the right places. The whole point is to change how the hair sits and moves.
The Beard Beasts Verdict
Textured haircuts still work because they solve a problem a lot of men have. Flat hair looks lifeless. Overstyled hair looks forced. Texture sits in the better middle ground.
The best textured haircuts add movement, shape, and some edge without turning the whole thing into a styling project. That is why some of them still look strong year after year, while others are better left in the barber’s camera roll.
So my take is simple.
Do not ask for texture like it is one haircut. Choose the version that actually suits your hair type, your routine, and the kind of finish you want. Get that right, and texture stops being a trend and starts being the reason the haircut works.