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Top 10 Tips for HairStyling Men's Asian & Korean Hair

Top 10 Tips for HairStyling Men's Asian & Korean Hair

Men's Korean hair, like every hair type, comes with its own strengths and challenges. That full, thick head of hair is definitely a major plus, but it can also have a mind of its own. It may fall flat, stick out at the sides, resist texture, or somehow refuse to stay styled no matter how much product you use.

The good news is that once you understand how men's Korean hair behaves, it becomes much easier and more fun to work with. With the right haircut, proper blow-drying technique, and the right products, your hair will be well on its way to looking ultra-sharp and clean.

Here are the top 10 hairstyling tips every guy with Korean hair should know.

1. Get the Right Haircut for Your Hair Direction

The haircut is everything. Asian hair often grows outward from the scalp, especially around the sides and back. That is why some guys feel like their hair starts looking puffy or boxy only a couple of weeks after a cut.

Ask your barber for a cut that works with your natural growth pattern instead of fighting against it. Tapers, fades, two-block cuts, textured crops, and layered medium-length styles can all work really well. The key is removing bulk in the right places while keeping enough length on top to create shape and movement.

 

2. Do Not Overuse Product

More product does not mean better hair. In fact, with thick or straight Korean hair, too much product can quickly make your hair look greasy, heavy, or stiff.

Start with a small amount of styling product, warm it up in your hands, and apply it evenly through your hair. You can always add more if needed, but once you overload your hair, it is hard to fix without rinsing it out. A dime-sized amount is usually a good place to start, depending on your hair length and the product you are using.

3. Go Light On The Conditioner

Conditioner is still important, even if your hair is already thick and healthy-looking. For Korean hair, a lightweight moisturizing conditioner is usually the best choice because it helps keep the hair soft, smooth, and manageable without making it feel too heavy. Look for conditioners that focus on hydration, smoothing, or strengthening, but avoid anything overly rich or heavy if your hair already falls flat easily.

The key is not overdoing it. Too much conditioner, especially near the roots, can make Asian hair feel heavy, slippery, or flat. Apply it mainly to the mid-lengths and ends, let it sit briefly, and rinse thoroughly so your hair stays hydrated without losing volume.

Pete & Pedro peppermint cream conditioner bottle on a white background

4. Use Heat to Train Your Hair

Asian hair can be stubborn, especially if it naturally falls forward, sticks up, or grows straight out on the sides. That is where heat comes in.

Use your blow dryer to “train” the hair into place. For example, if your sides stick out, blow-dry them downward and slightly back. If your fringe falls flat, blow-dry the roots upward before shaping the front. Product alone usually will not force stubborn hair to behave, but heat plus product can make a huge difference.

5. Go for Texture, Not Stiffness

A lot of guys make the mistake of locking their hair into place with too much gel or heavy pomade. The result? Hair that looks crunchy, shiny, or unnatural.

Instead, aim for texture. Matte products like clay, texture powder, sea salt spray, or styling cream usually work better for modern Asian hairstyles. These products help create separation, volume, and movement without making the hair look frozen. The goal is controlled, not cemented.

6. Get Regular Trims

Asian hair can lose its shape fast because of how thick and dense it can look as it grows. Even a small amount of extra length around the sides, neckline, or fringe can make the haircut look bulky.

Getting regular trims helps keep the shape clean. For shorter styles, every 3 to 5 weeks is a solid schedule. For medium-length styles, you may be able to stretch it a little longer, but you should still clean up the sides, neck, and ends before the style gets too heavy.

7. Limit Your Hair Washing

The goal with shampooing is to keep your scalp clean without stripping your hair too much. Asian hair is often naturally straight, strong, and thicker in diameter, which can make it look full and healthy. However, because of this, oil from the scalp can travel down the hair shaft more easily, making the hair look greasy or flat faster.

Try not to shampoo more than your hair actually needs. Some guys may need to wash daily if their scalp gets oily quickly, while others may do better washing every other day and rinsing with water in between. The answer is using a quality hydrating shampoo that cleans the scalp without leaving your hair feeling dry, rough, or stripped. A good moisturizing shampoo helps keep Asian hair soft and easy to style without weighing it down.

Pete & Pedro shampoo bottle on a white background


8. Use Dry Shampoo or Texture Powder

If your hair gets oily at the roots or falls flat throughout the day, dry shampoo or texture powder can be a game changer. These products help absorb excess oil while adding grip and lift, which is especially helpful for straight, heavy hair.

Use a small amount at the roots, then work it in with your fingers. This can bring second-day hair back to life, add volume before styling, or refresh your look without needing to fully wash and restyle your hair.

9.  Ask Your Barber to Remove Bulk, Not Just Length

With Asian hair, the issue is not always that the hair is too long. Sometimes, it is that there is too much weight and thickness sitting in the wrong areas. A regular haircut may make the hair shorter, but if the bulk is still there, your hair can still look puffy, boxy, or harder to style.

Ask your barber to remove bulk with texturizing, point cutting, layering, or careful thinning in the areas that feel too heavy. This helps the hair sit better, move more naturally, and hold shape without needing a ton of product. The goal is not to make the hair look thin. It is to make thick hair easier to control.

10. Use a Round Brush for Volume

A blow dryer alone helps, but pairing it with a round brush gives you even more control. A round brush can lift the roots, shape the front, and help create volume instead of letting the hair fall flat.

Use the brush to pull the hair upward and back while directing heat at the roots. This works especially well for styles like a side part, middle part, comma hair, or swept-back look where you want more flow, height, and shape.

The Final Rundown


The best part about having Korean hair, is what you choose to do with it. Pick a style you love, find the right product, and rock it with confidence all day long. With these 10 tips, you now have the tools you need to maximize those amazing locks!

Also Make Sure To Check Out:

How To Use Texture Powder

Men's Hairstyling Product Guide

Taper vs Fade Hairstyles

Top Hairstyles For Thick Hair

10 Celebrity Hairstyles To Copy!

 


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