Hair changes after 40, and pretending otherwise does not help anyone find a great cut. Texture can shift from smooth to slightly coarser, density often thins first at the crown, and the styling routine that worked at 28 may leave hair looking flat by 45. The good news is that hairstyles for women over 40 have moved past the tired "safe bob" stereotype, and there are now dozens of modern, effortless shapes built around real texture and real mornings. This roundup gathers 30 of them, organized so you can find your match fast instead of scrolling through decades of outdated advice.
You will leave this list with at least one style you can screenshot and bring straight to your stylist, described in words that actually mean something at the chair. We start with a quick-match guide that pairs face shape and hair texture with the categories below, then move through short, medium, and long styles before answering the most common questions. Hair naturally becomes finer and grows more slowly for many women as hormone levels shift with age, according to the Cleveland Clinic, which is exactly why the cuts here lean on layering and texture rather than sheer length to look full. Nothing on this list requires a dramatic personality change, just a conversation with your stylist and maybe a new part.
How to Find Your Most Flattering Hairstyle After 40 (Quick-Match Guide)
How to Find Your Most Flattering Hairstyle After 40 (Quick-Match Guide)
Face shape and hair texture decide whether a cut actually flatters you more than any trend does. Round faces suit height and diagonal lines, oval faces wear almost anything, square faces soften with layers and side-swept bangs, heart faces balance with curtain bangs, and long faces gain width from waves. See the face shape guide for the full breakdown.
- Round face: textured pixie, angled lob, long layers with curtain bangs
- Oval face: blunt bob with a root fade, sleek blunt lob, long feathered layers
- Square face: classic bob with soft layers, medium shag with side-swept bangs
- Heart-shaped face: shoulder-length cut with curtain bangs, wavy bob with a side part
- Long face: layered lob for round faces, textured shag for wavy hair
Fine hair looks fullest in shorter, blunter shapes, thick hair holds layering well, and curly or coily hair does best when it's cut to respect its natural pattern. Each style below lists a styling-time key, from 5-minute wash-and-go to 20-minute blowouts, so you know the real commitment before you book. Bookmark fine hair styles for more options.

Best Short Hairstyles for Women Over 40
Best Short Hairstyles for Women Over 40
Short hair is the category most associated with "over 40" searches, and for good reason: less length usually means less daily effort and more built-in volume at the crown. The ten cuts below range from barely-there pixies to face-framing bobs, with options for fine, thick, and curly textures so almost every reader finds a workable match. If you want even more inspiration once you have narrowed things down, guide to short cuts for women over 50 rounds up additional options built specifically for this length range. Three entries here are marked as the lowest-maintenance styles in the entire post, so look for that note if a five-minute routine is the priority.
Textured Pixie With Side-Swept Bangs
Round or square face shapes get the most out of this cut, since the side-swept fringe adds a diagonal line that softens strong angles. Fine to medium density hair holds the texture best without much product, though thick hair can wear it too with more aggressive thinning. The layers stay short and piecey through the crown, which keeps the whole shape light instead of helmet-like.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a textured pixie with heavy point-cutting, side-swept bangs grazing the brow, and short layers left loose at the crown.
Styling Time: About 5 minutes with texturizing paste on damp hair.
Not Ideal For: Very fine, thinning hair that needs the extra length a longer pixie provides for lift.

Classic Bob With Soft Layers
A classic bob with soft internal layers flatters nearly every face shape, which is part of why it remains one of the most requested cuts for women over 40. It performs best on medium to thick density hair, since the layers need enough hair to create movement without falling flat by midday. Square faces in particular benefit from the way soft layers break up a strong jawline instead of framing it in a hard, blunt line.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a jaw-to-chin length bob with soft internal layers and rounded, not blunt, ends.
Styling Time: About 10 minutes with a round brush for a soft bend at the ends.
Not Ideal For: Very fine hair that tends to look thin and stringy once layers remove weight.

Tapered Pixie for Fine Hair
This is one of the best options on the list for fine or thinning hair, since a close, tapered shape removes the length that fine strands struggle to support. Oval and heart-shaped faces wear it well too, with the sides kept close and a little length left on top for shape. Because there is so little length to weigh hair down, the crown holds volume through the day with minimal product.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a tapered pixie with a closely cut nape and sides, and slightly longer, textured pieces left on top for lift.
Styling Time: About 5 minutes, often just fingers and a small amount of volumizing mousse.
Not Ideal For: Anyone not ready to commit to trims every four weeks, since short tapered shapes grow out quickly.

Short Shag With Curtain Fringe
A short shag suits wavy or curly textures beautifully, since the choppy layers throughout are designed to catch and show natural texture. It works for most face shapes, though round faces get the most benefit from the height the shag builds at the crown. Curtain fringe adds a face-framing element around the eyes and cheekbones without the commitment of a full, blunt bang.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a short shag with heavy point-cutting throughout, a curtain fringe parted down the middle, and no blunt perimeter.
Styling Time: About 10 to 12 minutes with a diffuser or texturizing spray on damp hair.
Not Ideal For: Fine, straight hair that lacks the natural texture to keep choppy layers looking separated.

Blunt Bob With a Root Fade
A blunt bob with a graduated root fade pairs a modern color technique with a classic silhouette, and it looks best on oval and long face shapes. It looks strongest on medium to thick, straight to slightly wavy hair, since a crisp, blunt line needs smooth hair to read clearly. The root fade, where a slightly darker shade blends into the mid-lengths, also makes gray regrowth far less noticeable between color appointments.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a one-length blunt bob at the jaw with a soft root melt one to two shades darker than the mid-lengths.
Styling Time: About 12 minutes with a flat iron for a sleek finish.
Not Ideal For: Curly or coily textures, where a true blunt line is difficult to maintain between wash days.

Curly Crop for Natural Texture
This cut is built around curly and coily density, cut dry so every curl falls where it will actually sit. Round, oval, and heart face shapes all wear it well, since a stylist can customize the height or width right where each face needs it. High-density curls handle this shape best, since the volume that curls naturally create fills in a short silhouette instead of leaving it looking sparse.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a curly crop cut dry, curl by curl, with layers that follow your natural curl pattern rather than a one-length blunt cut.
Styling Time: About 15 minutes with a leave-in conditioner and curl cream on wet hair, then air-dry.
Not Ideal For: Fine, low-density curls that may look sparse once so much length is removed.

Asymmetrical Pixie With an Undercut
An asymmetrical pixie with an undercut suits oval and heart-shaped faces that want a bolder, more editorial silhouette than a traditional pixie offers. It works best on straight to wavy hair with medium density, since the longer top pieces need enough body to sweep over the shaved or closely cropped side. The dramatic length difference between the top and the undercut creates instant asymmetry, which reads as modern rather than severe once it is styled.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a pixie with a deep side part, a closely clipped undercut on one side, and longer, textured length swept over the top.
Styling Time: About 8 minutes with a flat iron or paddle brush to sweep the top pieces into place.
Not Ideal For: Very thin or thinning hair, since the undercut can expose more scalp than intended.

Stacked Bob for Thick Hair
A stacked bob, cut shorter and layered heavily at the back, is one of the best short options for thick, high-density hair, since it removes bulk without cutting into the overall length up front. Round and oval faces both wear this shape well, and the graduated back keeps the silhouette from reading as a heavy triangle. Because so much internal layering happens at the nape, the cut also holds its shape between salon visits better than many other short styles.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a stacked bob with graduated layers at the back, kept longer and less layered toward the front.
Styling Time: About 10 minutes with a round brush, focused mostly on smoothing the crown.
Not Ideal For: Fine or thin hair, which usually cannot support the internal layering this cut relies on.

Wash-and-Go Pixie for Busy Mornings
This is one of the lowest-maintenance cuts in the entire roundup, built for straight to wavy hair with medium density and mornings that do not leave time for a blow-dry. It flatters oval, round, and heart face shapes, since a slightly longer top and soft fringe can be angled to suit most bone structures. A light curl cream or sea salt spray is all it takes to make the cut look intentional straight out of the shower, no heat required.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a wash-and-go pixie with soft, rounded layers that fall naturally without needing a blow-dry to look finished.
Styling Time: Under 5 minutes, air-dried with a small amount of curl cream or texturizing spray.
Not Ideal For: Very curly or coily textures, which usually need a dedicated curl routine rather than a simple wash-and-go finish.

Short Layered Bob With Face-Framing Pieces
This bob suits nearly every face shape, since the face-framing pieces can be cut longer or shorter depending on where softness is needed most. It works best on fine to medium hair, where layers add the appearance of density without extra length weighing the crown down. Thick hair can wear it too, with a stylist thinning the interior so the face-framing pieces do not become too heavy.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a layered bob with longer face-framing pieces at the cheekbone and jaw, and internal layers throughout for movement.
Styling Time: About 10 minutes with a round brush or a wand for soft bends at the ends.
Not Ideal For: Anyone wanting a completely blunt, one-length silhouette, since this cut is built around layering.

Best Medium-Length Hairstyles for Women Over 40
Best Medium-Length Hairstyles for Women Over 40
Medium length is the single most searched category for women over 40, and it earns that popularity by splitting the difference between low-maintenance short cuts and dramatic long styles. The ten cuts below include blunt, layered, and wavy options, so whether your priority is polish or texture there is a shoulder-length match here. Several of these cuts also transition beautifully into a gray-blending color service, which we cover in more detail further down this list. A few need slightly more frequent trims to keep their shape, so look for that note if low upkeep matters most to you.
Long Bob (Lob) With Soft Waves
A long bob that grazes the collarbone works for nearly every face shape, and soft waves add movement that keeps the cut from looking too severe. Straight to wavy hair with medium to thick density holds this look best, since the waves need enough body to hold a bend. Oval and heart-shaped faces get the most benefit from the way the waves soften the jawline just above the chin.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a lob landing at the collarbone with soft layers built in to support a loose wave pattern.
Styling Time: About 15 minutes with a 1-inch curling wand for loose, alternating waves.
Not Ideal For: Very fine hair, which may need extra texturizing spray to hold the wave through the day.

Shoulder-Length Cut With Curtain Bangs
Curtain bangs paired with a shoulder-length cut suit almost every face shape, since the fringe splits down the middle and frames both sides of the face evenly. This combination is a strong match for square and long faces, adding width around the temples and softening a strong jawline. It suits straight to wavy hair with any density, since curtain bangs are one of the more forgiving fringe styles to grow out or maintain.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a shoulder-length cut with curtain bangs parted down the middle, blended into the layers at the cheekbone.
Styling Time: About 12 minutes, mostly spent rounding the bangs with a small brush.
Not Ideal For: Very curly or coily hair, where curtain bangs can spring up shorter than expected once dry.

Layered Lob for Round Faces
This layered lob is cut to add height and length illusion for round faces, using face-framing layers that start below the cheekbone rather than at it. It works on fine to medium hair, since the layering builds volume at the crown without adding bulk at the jaw. Straight and slightly wavy textures show the layering most clearly, though soft waves still read well on this shape.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a lob with face-framing layers beginning below the cheekbone, and lift added at the root through the crown.
Styling Time: About 15 minutes with a round brush, focused on root lift.
Not Ideal For: Very thick hair, where too much layering at this length can create an unwanted triangular silhouette.

Textured Shag for Wavy Hair
A textured shag is built for naturally wavy hair, using choppy, disconnected layers that let the wave pattern do most of the styling work. Oval and heart-shaped faces wear it well, and the shorter curtain fringe that typically accompanies it adds softness around the brow. High-density waves look especially good in this shape, since there is plenty of texture to fill in the choppy layering.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a shag with heavy point-cutting throughout the mid-lengths and ends, plus a soft curtain fringe.
Styling Time: About 10 minutes with a texturizing spray scrunched into damp hair, then air-dry.
Not Ideal For: Straight, fine hair without natural texture, which can leave the choppy layers looking thin rather than piecey.

Sleek Blunt Lob for Straight Hair
A sleek, one-length lob suits oval and heart faces best, since the crisp blunt line draws the eye horizontally rather than adding extra width. It performs best on naturally straight to barely wavy hair with medium to thick density, where the line reads clean without much effort. This is one of the more polished, office-friendly cuts on the list, especially for readers who want a low-fuss, no-layers silhouette.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a one-length lob at the collarbone with a blunt, horizontal cut line and minimal internal layering.
Styling Time: About 10 minutes with a flat iron for a smooth, glassy finish.
Not Ideal For: Curly, coily, or very fine hair, all of which struggle to hold a truly blunt line between salon visits.

Collarbone-Length Cut With Face-Framing Layers
Square and round faces benefit most from this cut, since the face-framing layers land right at the point where those shapes tend to be widest. It works on medium to thick hair, using layers to soften the perimeter without removing so much weight that the ends look wispy. Straight and wavy textures both take well to this shape, since the framing pieces can be styled straight or curled depending on the day.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a collarbone-length cut with face-framing layers starting at the cheekbone and blending into the length.
Styling Time: About 12 minutes with a wand for soft bends at the face-framing pieces.
Not Ideal For: Fine, thinning hair at the crown, which may need a shorter length to avoid looking flat on top.

Wavy Bob With a Side Part
A wavy bob with a deep side part is a strong match for heart and oval faces, since the asymmetry of the part balances a narrower chin. It suits naturally wavy to curly hair with medium density, letting the texture fall into the part without much intervention. The deep side part also does double duty for readers blending gray, since it naturally covers more regrowth at the root than a center part does.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a bob at the jaw or just below, cut to fall into a deep side part, with layers that support natural wave.
Styling Time: About 10 minutes, often just air-dried with a texturizing cream.
Not Ideal For: Very fine, straight hair, which may need extra styling to hold a deep side part without flattening by midday.

Volumizing Layered Cut for Fine Hair
Fine or thinning hair looks its fullest in this medium-length cut, since strategic layering creates the appearance of density without cutting hair shorter than shoulder length. It suits most face shapes, since the volume is built at the crown rather than concentrated at the perimeter. Straight, fine hair benefits most, though slightly wavy fine hair also holds the layering well.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for shoulder-length layers concentrated at the crown and mid-lengths, with a blunter, thicker-looking perimeter at the ends.
Styling Time: About 15 minutes with a round brush and root-lifting spray.
Not Ideal For: Thick or coarse hair, where this layering technique is unnecessary and can create bulk instead of the intended lift.

Angled Lob With a Deep Side Part
An angled lob, cut longer in front and shorter in back, flatters round and square faces best, thanks to the diagonal line that adds length toward the chin. It works on straight to wavy hair with medium to thick density, since the angle needs enough weight to hold its shape. This is a slightly bolder, more graphic take on the classic lob, best for readers who want their cut to read as clearly styled rather than soft and undone.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for an angled lob with the front pieces at the collarbone, the back cut shorter into the nape, and a deep side part.
Styling Time: About 12 minutes with a flat iron to define the angle.
Not Ideal For: Curly or coily hair, where the sharp diagonal line is difficult to maintain as curls shrink up when dry.

Medium Shag With Side-Swept Bangs
A medium shag with side-swept bangs suits oval, round, and heart faces alike, since the bangs can be angled to soften whichever feature needs it most. It works best on wavy to curly hair with medium to high density, letting the natural texture fill in the choppy layering throughout. This cut also transitions well for readers growing out a shorter shag, since the layers already in place make the in-between stage far less awkward.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a shoulder-length shag with heavy layering throughout and side-swept bangs blended into the top layer.
Styling Time: About 12 minutes with a diffuser or texturizing spray.
Not Ideal For: Very fine, straight hair, which may need extra product to keep the choppy ends from looking limp.

Best Long Hairstyles for Women Over 40
Best Long Hairstyles for Women Over 40
Long hair after 40 is not aging, it is a choice, and the difference between a flattering long cut and a tired one almost always comes down to layering. Every style in this section leans on face-framing techniques or internal layers to keep length from looking flat, heavy, or dated. There is an option here for thick, fine, and curly or coily hair, plus a dedicated transition cut for anyone growing out a shorter style. For even more inspiration once you have picked a favorite, long hair looks has additional options organized by texture and occasion.
Long Layers With Curtain Bangs
Long layers paired with curtain bangs suit nearly every face shape, since the fringe frames the face while the layers remove weight throughout the rest of the length. This combination works best on straight to wavy hair with medium to thick density, where the layers have enough body to move rather than lie flat. Square and long faces benefit most from the way the curtain bangs add softness around the temples.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for long layers starting at the chin, with curtain bangs parted down the middle and blended into the sides.
Styling Time: About 15 minutes with a wand for soft waves at the ends.
Not Ideal For: Very thin, fine hair without much natural body, which may look stringier once so much length is layered out.

Soft Waves With Face-Framing Layers
This style suits oval, heart, and round faces well, using face-framing layers to add movement right where the cheekbone and jaw need it most. It performs best on wavy hair with medium to thick density, since the waves need enough texture to hold shape through the layered ends. Straight hair can wear this look too with the help of a wand or flexi-rods overnight.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for long layers with extra face-framing pieces at the cheekbone, cut to support a loose wave pattern.
Styling Time: About 20 minutes with a curling wand for all-over waves.
Not Ideal For: Anyone who wants a completely low-maintenance, no-styling routine, since this look relies on some heat styling to look its best.

Long Shag for Thick Hair
A long shag is one of the best long options for thick, high-density hair, since the heavy layering removes bulk that would otherwise weigh the length down. Oval and square faces get the most out of it, thanks to the movement it adds around the jaw that a blunt, one-length cut cannot. Wavy and curly textures show the shag layering most clearly, though straight thick hair benefits from the reduced weight too.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a long shag with heavy layering throughout, point-cut ends, and a soft curtain fringe if you want one.
Styling Time: About 15 minutes with a texturizing spray, air-dried or diffused.
Not Ideal For: Fine or thin hair, which can look sparse once this much internal layering removes weight.

Sleek Straight Cut With Long Layers
Oval and heart faces wear this cut well, since long layers add movement to an otherwise sleek, straight silhouette. It works best on naturally straight to barely wavy hair with medium to thick density, where the layers can be blown out smooth without much frizz. This is a polished, low-drama option for readers who want long hair without a lot of texture or waves involved.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for long layers starting around the shoulders, blow-dried straight, with ends kept blunt rather than point-cut.
Styling Time: About 15 minutes with a round brush and flat iron for a sleek finish.
Not Ideal For: Curly or coily textures, which require significant heat and product to achieve this level of smoothness.

Layered Cut for Curly or Coily Hair
This layered long cut is built for curly and coily hair, cut dry so each curl falls into its true shape. It suits most face shapes, since a stylist familiar with curly cutting can adjust the layering to add height or width exactly where needed. High-density curls hold this shape best, since there is enough hair to fill in the layering without looking sparse at the ends.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a long layered cut done dry, curl by curl, with face-framing layers left slightly longer to avoid shrinkage surprises.
Styling Time: About 20 minutes with a leave-in conditioner and curl cream, then air-dry or diffuse.
Not Ideal For: Fine, low-density curls, which may need a shorter length to avoid looking weighed down.

Long Layers With a Side-Swept Fringe
A side-swept fringe paired with long layers suits round and square faces well, adding a diagonal line across the forehead that breaks up strong angles. It works on straight to wavy hair with medium density, since the fringe needs enough length to sweep to one side rather than sit flat. This is a softer, more grown-out alternative to a full curtain fringe for readers who want less daily fuss with their bangs.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for long layers with a side-swept fringe blended to graze the cheekbone, not cut with a hard line.
Styling Time: About 15 minutes with a round brush to sweep the fringe into place.
Not Ideal For: Very curly or coily hair, where a side-swept fringe can spring into a different shape than intended.

Beachy Waves for Low-Maintenance Styling
This is one of the lowest-maintenance long styles in the entire roundup, suited to naturally wavy hair with medium to thick density that already has texture to work with. It flatters nearly every face shape, since the loose, undone wave pattern softens angles across the board. A texturizing spray applied to damp hair and left to air-dry does most of the work here, which is exactly why it earns the low-maintenance label.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for long layers cut to bring out natural wave, with minimal thinning so the ends keep their texture and bend.
Styling Time: Under 10 minutes, mostly air-drying with a sea salt or texturizing spray.
Not Ideal For: Naturally straight, fine hair, which will not hold this wave pattern without a wand or overnight braids.

Long Bob Grown Into Layers (Transition Cut)
This transition cut is designed for anyone growing a shorter bob or lob into longer hair, using strategic layers to smooth over the awkward in-between stage. It suits every face shape, since the layering is adjusted to whatever length the hair currently is rather than following a single template. Fine and medium density hair transition through this stage most easily, while thick hair may need slightly more frequent shaping trims to stay tidy.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a "grow-out shaping cut" with long layers blended around the face, explaining that you are growing out a shorter style.
Styling Time: About 15 minutes with a wand, since the uneven lengths often need a little extra shaping to look intentional.
Not Ideal For: Anyone in a rush to reach full length, since a good transition still takes several months of small trims.

V-Cut Layers for Thinning Ends
V-cut layers, where the back is cut into a deep V shape with layers built around it, suit most face shapes and are a good fit for hair that has thinned or become wispy at the ends. It performs best on straight to wavy hair with medium density, using the V shape to create the illusion of a thicker, more defined end point. This is a smart pick for readers whose hair has thinned with age but who still want to keep their length.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for a V-cut with the deepest point at the center back, and long layers blended in to disguise thin, wispy ends.
Styling Time: About 15 minutes with a round brush to smooth and define the V shape.
Not Ideal For: Very thick hair, where a V-cut can look overly graphic rather than soft and blended.

Long Feathered Layers With Soft Bangs
Feathered layers paired with soft, wispy bangs flatter oval and heart faces most, since the fringe is light enough to frame the face without adding bulk near the forehead. This cut works on fine to medium hair with straight to wavy texture, where feathered ends can be blown out with movement rather than heavy weight. It is a slightly retro-inspired cut updated with softer bangs and less rigid layering than its predecessor from decades past.
What to Tell Your Stylist: Ask for long feathered layers throughout, with soft, wispy bangs that blend into the face-framing pieces rather than a blunt fringe line.
Styling Time: About 15 minutes with a round brush for outward-flipped ends.
Not Ideal For: Very thick or coarse hair, which can make feathered layers look heavy rather than light and flipped.

Frequently Asked Questions About Hairstyles for Women Over 40
Frequently Asked Questions About Hairstyles for Women Over 40
What Is the Most Flattering Haircut for Women Over 40?
There is no single most flattering cut, since face shape, hair texture, and density all affect how any style looks in real life. That said, layered bobs and lobs consistently rank among the most versatile options because the layering can be adjusted for nearly any face shape or texture. Use the quick-match guide near the top of this post to narrow things down to the two or three categories most likely to suit you specifically.
What Hairstyles Make You Look Younger After 40?
Cuts with softness around the face, particularly face-framing layers and curtain bangs, tend to read as more youthful because they soften harsh lines near the eyes and jaw. Movement matters too: a cut with some layering or wave pattern generally looks fresher than a completely flat, one-length style with no texture. This has nothing to do with anti-aging claims and everything to do with basic visual softness, which any hair type can achieve with the right layering.
How Often Should Women Over 40 Get a Haircut?
As a general range, short cuts need attention every 4 to 6 weeks, medium-length cuts every 6 to 8 weeks, and long layered styles every 8 to 12 weeks. These are not strict rules, since hair grows at different rates and some styles hold their shape longer than others between visits. If a cut is starting to lose its intended shape or the ends look noticeably uneven, that is generally a good sign a trim is overdue regardless of the calendar.
Is Long Hair OK for Women Over 40?
Yes, long hair is entirely appropriate at any age, and the idea that women must cut their hair short after a certain birthday is an outdated myth rather than a rule. What actually matters is whether the length is layered and styled in a way that suits your texture and density, since flat, heavy, unlayered length can look tired at any age. The long hairstyles featured in this post are specifically built with layering and face-framing techniques that keep length looking current rather than dated.
Finding the right hairstyles for women over 40 comes down to matching a cut to your real face shape, texture, and daily routine, not to chasing whatever trend happens to be popular this year. Save this post before your next salon visit, and use the exact stylist wording above so you walk out with the cut you actually pictured. Tell us in the comments which style you are trying first, we would love to hear how it turns out.

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