10 Male Hairstyles That Women Find Unattractive

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Confidence means nothing if your haircut screams wrong decade or poor judgment. Certain hairstyles trigger instant negative reactions from women, yet barbershops keep churning them out. Guys walk around thinking they look great, while dates mentally swipe left before conversations even start. Here are the cuts women wish would disappear forever.

Rattails

Rattails present a stark contrast to typical men’s haircuts, with one thin strand extending far below the rest. Once a bold ’80s trend, the style fell from favor as tastes shifted. However, its survival in Polynesian communities and sci-fi references shows how cultural memory keeps even unpopular looks alive.

Man Buns

Man buns might’ve had their cool moment, but most women say the trend feels dated now. What once screamed confidence now reads as trying too hard. Unless you’re an artist or a rock climber mid-adventure, the style can come off as more performative than effortlessly stylish.

Curtain Bangs

Curtain bangs create a soft, face-framing style, but maintaining symmetry takes effort. Many women see the look as dated and overly fussy, preferring cleaner, more natural cuts. Its boyish charm also doesn’t always translate into lasting appeal, especially on mature men.

Gelled And Slicked Back

Gelled and slicked-back hair creates a shiny, controlled appearance by combing hair flat using styling products. Became a trend in the 1920s and 1930s through Hollywood stars; it symbolized sophistication. Yet, overuse can make hair appear greasy or stiff, and in films, slicked-back looks signify villainous or untrustworthy characters.

Gel Spikes

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Picture walking into a room with hair defying gravity in perfect, stiff spikes. That statement was the goal for teens of the late 1990s and early 2000s who loved punk rock style. Over-application of gel, however, usually transforms flair into a crunchy, helmet-like misstep.

Combovers

Eyes immediately catch hair swept across thinning areas, which betrays the effort behind the style. Scenes in TV shows and movies have cemented their awkward reputation. And attempts to look fuller rarely succeed, thereby leaving a hairstyle remembered more for ridicule than for charm.

Bowl Cuts

Men sporting perfectly circular haircuts might think they’re making a bold statement, but women see something else entirely. Bowl cuts erase jawlines and flatten any sense of style maturity. Childhood nostalgia belongs in photo albums, not on dates with grown adults seeking romantic connection.

Mullets

Mullets may scream confidence, but most women hear chaos instead. The sharp divide between the short front and the long back feels like two different haircuts arguing. What once symbolized rebellion now mostly signals confusion about what decade you’re living in.

Faux Hawks

Somewhere between a mohawk and a midlife crisis sits the faux hawk. It wants to look fearless but still pass HR’s dress code. Unfortunately, all that spiking and shaping usually signals one thing—too much time in front of the mirror and not enough natural style.

Anything Unkempt

There’s messy in a good way, and then there’s just… neglected. Women can usually tell the difference. When hair looks more accidental than effortless, it sends the wrong message. No amount of “it’s my vibe” can cover up what really looks like skipped showers and zero effort.