🌱 First Shave Guide

Your First Shave: Everything You Need to Know Before You Start

The right age, the right tools, the right technique — and what to do when it goes wrong. An honest first-shave guide for young UK men written without the fluff.

📅 April 2026⏱ 8 min read✍ SmartShave Team

There’s no instruction manual for your first shave — and the ones that do exist are often written by people who’ve been shaving for 20 years and have forgotten what it’s like to not know anything. This guide is different. It covers everything honestly: when to start, what to buy, exactly what to do, what will probably go wrong, and how to fix it when it does.

When should you start shaving?

There’s no fixed age. The right time to start shaving is when you have visible facial hair growth that you want to remove — not when you’ve reached a particular age or when someone tells you it’s time. For most young men in the UK, this is somewhere between 14 and 17, though it varies widely based on genetics and hormone levels.

The key signals that it’s time:

  • Visible dark hair on the upper lip, chin, or jaw that you’re self-conscious about
  • Hair growth that’s becoming dense enough to require more than occasional trimming
  • You simply want to — and there’s nothing wrong with shaving earlier if you prefer a clean face
The Most Important Thing to Know Shaving does NOT make hair grow back thicker, darker, or faster. This myth has been scientifically disproved for nearly 100 years. If you’re holding off on shaving because you’re worried this will happen — don’t. The hair that grows back after shaving is exactly the same hair, cut blunt rather than tapered at the tip, which only makes it feel coarser temporarily.

Facial hair develops in stages — know where you are

1
Early Stage

Light, fine hair (vellus) on upper lip and chin. Often barely visible. Trimming or leaving alone is fine at this stage.

2
First Shave

Dark, coarser terminal hairs appearing on upper lip and corners of jaw. This is typically when shaving becomes relevant.

3
Developing

Growth spreading across jaw, chin, and neck. Regular shaving (every 2–4 days) becomes necessary for a consistently clean look.

4
Established

Full adult facial hair pattern. Daily or near-daily shaving becomes typical for men who want a consistently clean shave.

Your starter kit — what you actually need

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A quality cartridge razor

Start with a cartridge razor — not a safety razor. Safety razors have a learning curve that produces cuts when you’re new. A SmartShave 3-blade cartridge is ideal for first-time shavers.

Essential
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Shaving gel or cream

Never shave dry. A simple, fragrance-free shaving gel provides the lubrication that prevents the razor from dragging — which is where cuts come from.

Essential
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Aftershave balm

Not the alcohol splash your dad uses — a soothing, moisturising balm. New skin is more reactive than experienced skin. A gentle balm prevents redness and dryness.

Essential
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A good mirror and light

Shaving in poor light is a reliable way to nick yourself. Good lighting (ideally facing a window) is non-negotiable, especially for the first few shaves.

Essential

Your first shave — step by step

1
Shower or wash your face with warm water

Warm water softens facial hair and makes it significantly easier to cut. Shaving on a dry, cold face is harder and more likely to cause irritation. If you shower in the morning, shave straight after.

2
Apply a generous amount of shaving gel

Squeeze a small amount (about the size of a grape) onto your fingers and work it into the areas you’re shaving with small circular motions. Wait 30 seconds before shaving — this extra time softens hair further.

3
Shave with the grain — in the direction hair grows

Look at how your hair grows — for most young men it grows downward on the cheeks and chin. Shave in that direction first. This is “shaving with the grain” and it’s the safest starting point.

4
Use light strokes — let the blade do the work

Hold the razor and guide it — don’t press it. If you’re pressing down with force, stop. A good razor with a lubricated blade needs almost no pressure. Short strokes of 2–3cm are better than long sweeps.

5
Rinse the blade every few strokes

Rinse the razor under running water every 3–4 strokes to clear the hair from between the blades. A clogged blade drags instead of cutting — and dragging is where nicks come from.

6
Rinse your face with cool water and pat dry

Cool water reduces any redness. Pat — don’t rub — your face dry with a clean towel. Then apply your post-shave balm to the areas you’ve shaved. You’re done.

First-shave FAQ

I cut myself. What do I do?
Don’t panic — everyone nicks themselves learning to shave. Press a small piece of tissue to the cut for 30–60 seconds. The bleeding will stop on its own. Never put alcohol directly on a fresh cut — use cold water instead. An alum block (available from pharmacies) closes cuts almost instantly if you want to invest in one.
How often should I shave?
Only shave when you have enough hair growth to make it worthwhile. Early on, this might be once a week or less. As hair growth increases over the coming months, you’ll find a natural rhythm. There’s no rule that says you must shave every day.
My skin is red after shaving. Is this normal?
Mild redness for 15–20 minutes is entirely normal, especially for your first few shaves. Apply your aftershave balm and the redness should fade. If it lasts more than an hour regularly, you may be pressing too hard, using a dull blade, or shaving too many times over the same area.
When should I change my blade?
When it feels like it’s dragging rather than gliding. For most people this is every 5–7 shaves. If you’re only shaving once a week at first, one blade might last you a month or more.
Should I shave every day to make my beard grow faster?
No. Shaving frequency has zero effect on how fast or thick your beard grows. Beard growth speed is entirely determined by genetics and hormones — shaving more often won’t change either.

SmartShave is the ideal first razor — sharp enough for a clean shave, gentle enough for new skin, and affordable enough that you’re not paying Gillette prices while you find your routine.

Start with SmartShave from £9.99 →

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