How To Cut Your Own Hair at Home in 4 Easy Steps

Read these stylists' tips before you pick up a pair of scissors.

Daniel Kim/Stocksy
Daniel Kim/Stocksy

Any hairstylist will tell you that cutting your hair is best left to the professionals under normal circumstances. However, sometimes you get busy or don't want to spend the money on a haircut. We get it. Cutting a very minimal amount from your ends is totally doable at home. The keyword here is minimal. If you need a major cut or want a completely new style, it is best to save that for the professionals.

"People go to their hairdresser and ask for a trim, only to end up with two inches off, but that's not a trim," says Kenna, founder and owner of Brooklyn's Kennaland Hair Studio. "A trim is half an inch, or even just a centimeter, and I wouldn't recommend doing more than that if you're trimming your own hair."

Kali Ferrara, hairstylist at The Salon Project at Saks Fifth Avenue in New York City, agrees. "If you really cannot wait until you can get back into your stylist's chair, err on the side of caution when snipping away," she tells InStyle. "Always cut less than you think you need in order to leave room for damage control and the chance to even out the length if one side is longer than the other.

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Here, the two stylists share their tips on how to give yourself a DIY trim at home without completely messing up your haircut.

Step One: Use the Right Scissors

First things first, you'll need to find the right pair of scissors for the job, and no, the plastic ones you picked up from Ikea won't produce the best results.

Kenna suggests using a pair of steel scissors, which are more precise, although even kitchen or fabric scissors will do the trick. "I've actually used a pair of kitchen scissors on the set many times after mine went missing or got taken at the airport," Kenna says. "As long as they're sharp, they don't have a gap at the end, and are angled right, you can use them."

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Step Two: Section Your Hair

You'll want to keep your hair dry with your natural parting in place, and use your ears as a guide to determine exactly how to section off your layers.

"All the hair at the front of your ears is the front of your hair, and anything behind your ears is the back of your hair," Kenna explains. "Never trim the back of your hair yourself as there are lines and corners your hairdresser has put in there to give the cut structure." The sides, on the other hand, don't have as many corners, and as long as you're comfortable with a pair of scissors, they should be easier to work with.

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Step Three: Take It Slow With Bangs

For bangs, Ferrara recommends cutting the hair damp so that you can see how it naturally falls, while also giving a "little bit of wiggle room for error." Bangs can be tricky, so take it slow and don't cut too much.

Use sharp scissors and hold the blade vertically and slide the blades an inch into your hair before snipping. Cutting bangs using this method is more forgiving than a straight-across cut.

Side-swept bangs are more forgiving than blunt bangs, which require a precise line. You may want to leave that to a professional. Don't pull your hair down too tightly when trimming, as you may cut more than you intend. Also, remember that dry hair will look shorter than wet hair, so factor that in when cutting.

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VIDEO: How to Trim Your Own Bangs Without Screwing Them Up

Step Four: Trim Following the Point-Cut Method

Separate out the front sections of your hair. Start from the bottom and work your way up using the point-cutting method.

This was touched on above, but the point-cut method is great for beginners. "Angle the end of your scissors as parallel as you can with your hair, and cut into the ends. It's a more forgiving way of cutting," says Kenna. "Never ever cut at a blunt angle, because you'll end up with chunky lines."

Work slowly section by section until you reach the top portion, and resist the urge to try out the DIY ponytail trimming method you looked up on Pinterest. This has the potential to create too many uneven angles, and since some areas of hair won't reach the tip of the ponytail, you'll essentially be chopping at the shorter layers.

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Following these tips won't end in a hair disaster, but you will make a mess, so choose the setting for your DIY haircut wisely. "Just be careful, cut small amounts slowly in sections, and be mindful of the mess," Kenna advises. "Cutting your hair makes a mess, so do it over your sink or somewhere you can clean easily, and not over your makeup bag."

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Read the original article on InStyle.