Alright, so here’s something most people don’t think about when they ask for medium hair with side bangs, the bang itself is maybe ten percent of the look but it controls about ninety percent of whether the whole thing feels right or wrong on you. I had a client last year, gorgeous thick hair, came in with a photo of this perfect swoopy side bang and I could already see from her growth pattern that it was going to fight her every single morning. We ended up going with a slightly different angle on the bang, just a half inch shift in where I started the section, and she texted me three days later saying it was the first time bangs ever just fell into place for her. That’s the kind of thing that doesn’t show up in a photo but makes all the difference when you’re standing in front of your bathroom mirror on a Tuesday.
The other thing I want you to know before we look through these is that medium length hair is honestly the most underrated canvas to work with, because you get all the movement and softness of longer hair but the shape actually holds instead of just hanging there. Side bangs on a medium cut can lift your whole face if they’re done right, or they can sit there like a limp curtain if nobody bothered to think about your density and where your hair naturally wants to part. I point-cut almost every bang I do now because blunt lines on a side bang just don’t move the way they should, and movement is the whole point. So let’s go through these and I’ll tell you what I actually think about each one.


So what I love about this one is how the layers do all the work without looking like they’re trying, if that makes sense. The hair is on the finer side here and whoever cut this was smart about it because they kept the layers long enough to maintain some weight at the ends while still giving that nice movement through the mid-lengths. The bangs are soft and wispy and they’re blending right into the face-framing pieces, which is exactly how a side bang should behave on fine hair, you don’t want a hard line where the bang ends and the rest begins. This is one of those cuts that looks like you just woke up and your hair decided to cooperate, which of course means it was cut really well. You will need to get those bangs trimmed probably every four to five weeks though, because once they get even a little too long on fine hair they start looking heavy and clumpy instead of airy.


Oh I have a soft spot for this one because curly bangs are honestly one of the most fun things to cut when the client trusts you enough to let you do it. The bangs here are blunt but they don’t look harsh at all because the curl softens everything, and that warm color is doing so much heavy lifting, it makes the whole cut feel approachable and a little playful. I will say that if you’re thinking about trying this, your curl pattern matters more than your face shape honestly, because the bangs are going to shrink up and if you’ve got a tighter curl than what you see here you’ll want to leave them longer than you think. The volume through the sides is gorgeous and that comes from the layers working with the natural texture instead of against it. Just make sure you’ve got a good curl cream you like because this look lives and dies by how well you scrunch and leave it alone.


This is the kind of cut I’d give someone who tells me they want to look like they just came from the beach but also have a work meeting at two, and honestly it delivers on both. The wispy bangs are perfectly undone and they’re sitting right where they should to open up the face without that heavy curtain feeling. What I really notice here is the subtle highlights woven through, they’re giving the texture something to catch the light on and that’s what makes wavy hair look expensive instead of just messy. The shoulder length is smart too because it’s long enough to pull back but short enough that the layers actually swing when you move. I wouldn’t change much about this if you brought it to my chair.


The balayage on this one is really pretty, that warmth through the mid-lengths is what gives the whole cut its personality, because without it the layers would still be nice but they wouldn’t have that same depth that makes you look twice. The wispy bangs are kept light which is the right call here since the hair isn’t super thick, and the layering through the lengths is gentle enough that you’re not losing any fullness where you need it. I think this is a really solid “I want something different but I’m not trying to have a whole moment” cut, which honestly is what most of my clients are actually looking for even when they come in with dramatic photos. The kind of cut that just quietly looks good every day without demanding much from you beyond a quick round brush blowout when you feel like it.


Now this is a polished look and I want to be honest about what that means in terms of daily effort, because sleek hair like this doesn’t just happen on most people. The cut itself is beautifully done, the side bangs are barely there in the best way, just enough to soften the part and give the face a little frame without any weight. The layers underneath are doing a nice job of keeping the ends from looking too blunt and heavy. But if your hair has any natural wave or frizz to it you’re going to need a flat iron and some patience to get this smooth finish. For someone with naturally straight hair though, this is an incredibly easy cut to maintain day to day, just blow dry and go.


I keep coming back to the way the bangs sit here because they’re doing exactly what a side bang should do, sweeping across the forehead with just enough curve to feel intentional but not stiff. The whole cut has this nice put-together quality that doesn’t feel overdone, and the layers are blended so seamlessly that you almost don’t notice them until the hair moves. On finer hair like this, that kind of blending is everything because chunky layers would just make it look thin. I’d say this is a great option if you’re the type who likes to look polished but you’re not going to spend forty minutes styling every morning, a round brush at the roots for a little lift and you’re out the door.


That shine though. This is what healthy hair looks like and I don’t care how many serums and glossing treatments exist, you cannot fake this level of shine on damaged hair, so if this is your goal let’s talk about your hair health first and your cut second. The side bangs here are thick and swoopy and they work because the hair itself has enough density and weight to hold that shape without flopping around. The dark color is rich and dimensional even without obvious highlights, which tells me there’s probably some really nice toning happening. This cut would look completely different on fine hair honestly, it really needs that thickness to carry the volume through the bang and the layers the way you see it here.


I like this one a lot because it has that quality where it looks like the person didn’t try very hard but everything just lands perfectly, and getting that “I didn’t try” effect actually takes a really considered cut. The side bangs have texture to them, they’re not one solid piece, and that’s what keeps the look feeling modern instead of like something from 2009. The slight wave through the lengths is doing all the styling work and whoever layered this knew where to put the movement, right around the face and through the ends, so it doesn’t go flat against the head. This is the kind of cut that actually looks better on day two hair which is honestly my favorite thing to tell a client.


Those caramel highlights are gorgeous and they’re placed exactly where they need to be, right around the face and through the bang area, which brightens everything up without looking stripy or overdone. The bangs here are more face-framing than a traditional side bang, they’re parted and swept to either side which gives you a little more flexibility if you want to push them back some days. I will say that this style of bang is one of the easiest to grow out if you change your mind, because it just blends into the layers naturally, so if you’re nervous about committing this is a really nice entry point. The wave in the hair is subtle and pretty and I think a little texturizing spray would keep this looking exactly like the photo all day.


This warm brown color is one of those tones that looks good on almost everyone and I don’t say that lightly, because I think most “universal” colors are a myth that colorists tell clients to keep things simple. But this particular shade has enough warmth without going coppery, and enough depth without going flat, that it really does work across a wide range of skin tones. The cut is straightforward and pretty, soft layers that give finer hair some body and side bangs that sit gently without demanding attention. It’s the kind of haircut that your coworkers would compliment but not be able to pinpoint exactly what changed, which honestly is usually the sign of a really good cut.


This is very classic and clean and I appreciate that because sometimes you don’t need a trendy cut, you need a cut that just works and looks intentional every time you leave the house. The side-swept bangs here have a nice weight to them, they’re not wispy, and that gives the whole style a more structured feel. On finer hair this is actually a great choice because the blunt-ish bang creates the illusion that you have more hair than you do, which is a trick I use constantly. The length is perfect for pulling into a low ponytail or a clip when you need it out of the way, and it still looks finished when it’s down. I’d recommend a lightweight volumizing mousse at the roots to keep the crown from falling flat as the day goes on.


Okay so bold straight bangs are a commitment and I always tell people that upfront because there’s nothing worse than cutting a strong bang on someone who isn’t prepared to style it or trim it regularly. But when they work, they really work, and here they look fantastic. The blunt line across the forehead is softened by the slight texture in the rest of the hair, so it doesn’t feel severe at all. What I notice is that the bang is cut just barely above the eyebrows which is the sweet spot in my opinion, any shorter and it starts feeling costumey, any longer and you’re blowing hair out of your eyes all day. If your hair has a wave pattern similar to what you see here, this is very doable, just know that your bangs will need a quick pass with a flat iron on humid days.


The color on this one is what grabs me first, that rich chocolate base with those caramel pieces woven through is one of my favorite things to do because it adds so much dimension without looking highlighted in that obvious way. The cut itself is lovely too, the waves have nice definition and the side bangs blend right into the movement of the rest of the hair so there’s no awkward separation. I think this would be a beautiful option for someone who has a bit of natural wave they’ve been fighting, because the cut is really designed to work with that texture rather than smooth it out. Just let your hair do its thing and it’ll look like this.


Curly cuts make me so happy when they’re done well because there’s nothing that looks worse than a curly cut done by someone who clearly learned on straight hair and then just hoped for the best. This one is done well. The curls have bounce and definition and the side bangs are cut to the right length so they curl up and frame the face instead of shrinking into a weird little pouf on the forehead. The layers are key here, they’re what’s allowing each curl to spring individually instead of all clumping together into a triangle shape, which is the number one complaint I hear from curly-haired clients. If you have curls like this, please please please find someone who cuts curly hair dry, or at least finishes dry, because cutting this wet would give you a completely different result. A good leave-in conditioner is non-negotiable with this look.


The layering on this cut is really thoughtful, it’s concentrated around the face and through the front pieces which gives you all the dimension and framing without thinning out the back and losing your length. The bangs blend so naturally into the layers that it almost doesn’t read as “bangs” in the traditional sense, it’s more like the whole front of the hair was designed to fall toward your cheekbones, which is incredibly flattering. I think this is one of those cuts that photographs well but also looks just as good in real life which is not always the case honestly. If you have fine to medium hair this would be a gorgeous option, and I think some subtle highlights through those face-framing pieces would elevate it even further if you’re open to color.


The waves here are doing a lot of the heavy lifting and I think that’s worth pointing out because this cut would read very differently if it were blown out straight, it would still be pretty but it wouldn’t have that same energy. The side bangs are thick and full and they blend into the waves beautifully, which tells me whoever styled this probably used a 1.25 inch curling iron and alternated directions, that’s how you get that tousled look that doesn’t seem too perfect. The caramel highlights are catching light through the waves and adding warmth around the face. I’d say this is a medium to thick hair situation, if you tried this on very fine hair you’d probably end up with bangs that look great and then the rest of the hair just kind of sitting there.


The color here is doing most of the talking honestly, those warm tones brighten the face in a way that no amount of layering alone could accomplish, and I think that’s something people underestimate when they’re only thinking about the cut. The bangs are soft and face-framing and they’re parted just slightly off-center which is much more flattering on most people than a dead-center part with curtain bangs, even though that’s what everyone asks for right now. The layers have a gentle movement to them, nothing dramatic, just enough to keep the hair from looking like one solid sheet. This is a low-effort, high-reward kind of style for someone who’s willing to invest in the right color and then just let the cut be simple.


There’s a natural ease to this cut that I really like, it doesn’t look like it’s trying to be anything other than nice hair that falls well, and sometimes that simplicity is exactly what you need. The face-framing bangs are long enough to tuck behind the ear on days when you don’t feel like dealing with them, which is a small detail that matters way more than people realize when they’re committing to bangs for the first time. The wave in the hair gives it texture and the layers are cut to enhance that wave rather than flatten it, which is the mark of a good stylist who actually looked at the hair before picking up the shears. I think this would be a great cut to bring in as a reference photo because it’s achievable on a lot of different hair types.


That dark brown color is gorgeous and I want to talk about it for a second because so many people overlook the power of a really rich single-process brunette, everyone wants highlights but sometimes a glossy all-over color like this is more striking than any balayage I could give you. The side bangs are soft and they sit right at the cheekbone which is where I like to aim for most of my clients because it creates this nice diagonal line that’s universally flattering. The subtle layering starting around the chin is clever because it gives movement to the lower half without touching the weight at the top, so you get swing without sacrificing any of that beautiful fullness. This is a really wearable cut, the kind of thing that looks as good in a ponytail as it does down, and I think the styling on this is minimal which is always a plus.


The texture in this cut is what makes it, those soft waves are giving the hair so much life and the wispy bangs are the perfect weight for this kind of look because anything heavier would compete with all that movement happening below. I notice the color has some really subtle variation through it, almost like a very natural sun-kissed effect, and that’s adding dimension that you wouldn’t get from a flat single color on wavy hair. This is a particularly good option for finer hair because the waves create volume and the wispy bang doesn’t take away from what’s already a lighter density. I will say that getting this texture on mornings when you’re in a hurry takes a little practice, a quick scrunch with some sea salt spray on damp hair and then diffusing or air drying is probably the easiest route.


These curls have so much personality and the cut is working with them instead of trying to tame them into something they’re not, which is honestly the highest compliment I can give a curly cut. The side bangs are sitting right where they should, framing the face without that frizzy halo effect that happens when curly bangs are cut too short or too blunt. The highlights through the curls are really well placed too, they’re catching light on the outer layer and giving the whole thing a brightness that keeps it from looking heavy even though there’s a lot of hair here. For anyone with natural curls thinking about bangs, this is a great reference because it shows that you can absolutely have side bangs with curly hair, you just need someone who understands how curl shrinkage works and cuts accordingly. The length is smart too, just below the shoulders which gives the curls room to bounce without getting into triangle territory.


I love the warmth of this color, it’s rich without being red and it makes the layers look almost three-dimensional, like each piece of hair is a slightly different shade which is exactly what good layering and good color can do together. The side bangs are thick enough to make a statement but they’re blended into the layers so they don’t look disconnected from the rest of the cut, which is a mistake I see a lot where the bangs feel like they belong to a different haircut than the rest of the head. The waves here have a nice loose quality, they’re not ringlets and they’re not beach waves, they’re somewhere in between and that in-between texture is actually the easiest to achieve because you just need a large barrel iron and about ten minutes. This is the kind of cut that grows out really gracefully too which I always factor in.


Curtain bangs and I have a complicated relationship because I think they’re one of the most requested styles right now and at least half the time they’re not quite right for the person asking, but when they ARE right they’re absolutely beautiful and this is one of those cases. The way these bangs part and fall to either side of the face is really lovely and the shoulder-length cut gives them enough context that the whole thing feels balanced. The waves add a warmth and a casualness that keeps it from looking too done, and that rich color is just beautiful, it has depth without any highlights at all which I think is underappreciated. This style does need you to be comfortable with a little maintenance though, curtain bangs have a way of getting annoying around the three-week mark when they’re hitting your eyes but aren’t long enough to tuck, so just know that going in.


What I notice about this cut is how light and airy it feels, the layers are doing their job without being obvious about it and the side bangs have this gentle quality, like they just landed there naturally. The slight wave in the hair gives it enough texture to keep things interesting but it’s not a heavily styled look, this is someone who probably ran a boar bristle brush through it and walked out the door, and I respect that. On finer hair this cut is really forgiving because the layers are creating shape without removing bulk that you can’t afford to lose. I think the simplicity is what makes it work honestly, there’s no competing elements, just a good clean cut on hair that’s in nice condition.


This warm chestnut color is making me want to recommend it to about six of my current clients because it’s one of those shades that just wraps around you like a good sweater, it’s cozy and flattering and it makes your skin look warmer without pushing into orange territory. The cut is pretty and well-structured, the layers are adding movement through the mid-lengths and the side bangs are softening the forehead area in a way that’s gentle rather than dramatic. I think this is a fantastic option for someone who wants a noticeable change primarily through color rather than a big chop, because the cut itself is fairly classic and safe but that color transforms the whole look. You would want to use a color-safe shampoo to keep this shade from fading, especially those warm tones which tend to wash out faster than cool ones.


The delicacy of this cut is what gets me, everything about it is soft, the wispy bangs, the textured ends, the gentle waves, and when all those soft elements come together the result is really feminine and easy. I think this is one of those styles that works across a pretty wide age range too, it doesn’t read specifically young or specifically mature, it just looks like well-cut hair on someone who takes care of it. The layering around the face is subtle, it’s not giving you big swoopy curtain pieces, it’s just quietly shaping the hair so it falls towards the cheekbones. For finer hair this is ideal because there’s enough texture to suggest fullness without any aggressive layering that would make thin ends obvious. A gloss treatment at the salon every couple of months would keep this looking really polished.


This has that undone quality that always looks effortless in photos but in reality takes a specific kind of cut to achieve, you can’t just rough-dry any haircut and end up here. The layers are positioned to fall in a way that creates movement on their own, and the face-framing bangs are long enough that they blend into the rest of the hair rather than sitting separately on the forehead. I think whoever cut this did a lot of point-cutting through the ends because there’s no bluntness anywhere, everything tapers off gradually which is what gives it that lived-in feeling. If you have natural wave or texture in your hair this would be pretty easy to pull off, if your hair is very straight you’d probably need to put some product in and scrunch it while it dries to get this kind of body.


These bangs have a fullness to them that I find really appealing, they’re not wispy or thin, they’re lush and fluffy and they take up space in a way that balances out the rest of the cut nicely. On medium to thick hair this kind of bang works beautifully because the hair has enough density to hold that volume without going flat by lunchtime, which is what happens when you try to force fluffy bangs on fine hair. The waves through the lengths are enhancing the overall texture and I think a bit of mousse scrunched in while damp is probably all you need to get this look. I do want to mention that full bangs like this need trimming more often than their wispier counterparts because once they start growing out they can go from fluffy to shaggy pretty fast, so budget for a bang trim between your regular appointments.


This is a really well-balanced cut, the length is right at that sweet spot where it’s easy to style down or throw up in a clip, and the soft side bangs are adding interest without dominating the look. The texture through the lengths is nice and I think adding a balayage to something like this would be gorgeous because you’d get that light catching through the waves and it would take the whole thing up a notch, even though it already looks great as is. The layers are creating movement without making the ends look thin, which is always the balancing act with layered cuts, and this one nails it. For someone with fine to medium hair who wants something that feels current without being trendy, this is exactly the kind of cut I’d suggest.


This is one of those cuts where everything just works together and there’s nothing I would change, the length, the wave pattern, the way the side bangs fall, it all feels cohesive and natural and like this person’s hair just does this on its own, which is the dream really. The slight layering at the ends is smart because it keeps the wave from getting weighed down and clumpy at the bottom, which is something I see happen a lot with one-length cuts on wavy hair. The side bangs are just barely sweeping to the side, they’re not heavily styled, and that casualness is what ties the whole look together. I think this would be really pretty on someone with fine to medium hair who has a bit of natural wave they want to enhance rather than straighten out, just work with what you’ve got and let the cut do the rest.
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'https:' : 'http:') + '//a.pub.network/latesthairstyles/pubfig.min.js'; sctHl.parentNode.insertBefore(sct, sctHl); })(); }catch(e){} if (w < 900 ){ try { freestar.config.enabled_slots.push({ placementName: "LatestHairstyles_article_below_slideshow", slotId: "LatestHairstyles_article_below_slideshow" }); freestar.config.enabled_slots.push({ placementName: "LatestHairstyles_article_above_slideshow", slotId: "LatestHairstyles_article_above_slideshow" }); // freestar.config.enabled_slots.push({ placementName: "latesthairstyles_banner_mobile", slotId: "latesthairstyles_banner_mobile" }); if (newsletter_email != '') { freestar.queue.push(function(){ freestar.identity.setIdentity({ email:newsletter_email }); }); } //freestar.config.enabled_slots.push({ placementName: "LatestHairstyles_article_BTF_mobile", slotId: "LatestHairstyles_article_BTF_mobile" }); // freestar.config.enabled_slots.push({ placementName: "LatestHairstyles_article_below_video_mobile", slotId: "LatestHairstyles_article_below_video_mobile" }); //freestar.config.enabled_slots.push({ placementName: "FreeStarVideoAdContainer_Elements_Mobile", slotId: "FreeStarVideoAdContainer_Elements_Mobile" }); } catch(e) { } //var below_video_mobile_ad = document.getElementById("LatestHairstyles_article_below_video_mobile"); //below_video_mobile_ad.style.display = "block"; } if (w < 900 ){ //setInterval(showAdEightSeconds, 8000); //setInterval(showAdSixteenSeconds, 13000); } }//noadtest loadfreestar = 1; var iframeurl = document.getElementById('iframeUrl'); if (iframeurl != null && iframeurl.value !="none") { var amazoniframe = document.getElementById('amazonIframe'); if (amazoniframe != null) amazoniframe.src = iframeurl; } } } }//end check pushly