How to Shave for the First Time: The Complete Beginner’s Guide | SmartShave
Beginner’s Guide

How to Shave for the First Time — Everything You Need to Know

Starting to shave? This guide covers everything from choosing your first razor to getting a clean, comfortable result — without the cuts, redness, or guesswork.

✓ Step-by-step technique ✓ What to buy first ✓ Common mistakes avoided
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First Facial Hair
Light, patchy growth — a trimmer or single-blade razor is usually best to start
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Regular Shaving Starts
When growth becomes consistent — time to establish a proper technique and routine
Mastering the Shave
Learning grain direction, prep, and post-shave care — the skills that last a lifetime

Nobody is born knowing how to shave — and nobody should have to learn by trial and painful error. The basics of a good shave are not complicated, but they are rarely taught clearly. This guide gives you the full picture from the very beginning.

Most people start shaving without any real instruction — they grab whatever razor is in the bathroom, run it across their face a few times, and hope for the best. The result is usually a mediocre shave at best and a red, irritated face at worst. The good news is that once you know the right technique, a consistently clean and comfortable shave is genuinely easy to achieve.

Before You Begin: Choosing Your First Razor

For a first shave, a quality cartridge razor is the right starting point — not a straight razor, not an electric trimmer for a proper close shave, and not the cheapest disposable from the corner shop. A cartridge razor with a pivoting head, multiple blades, and a lubrication strip gives a first-timer the most forgiving and consistent experience possible.

What to Look For

Pivoting head (follows the face automatically), 3–5 blades (balances closeness with skin tolerance), and a lubrication strip with Aloe or Vitamin E (reduces irritation). SmartShave’s starter kit at £9.99 hits every one of these markers and is specifically designed as an entry point to quality shaving.

Skip the cheapest disposable razors for your first shave. They have rigid heads that cannot follow facial contours, dull blades that drag rather than cut, and no lubrication — all of which amplify the mistakes that beginners make most often. A slightly better starting tool makes the technique much easier to learn.

Your First Shave: Step by Step

1
Wash Your Face with Warm Water First

Run warm (not hot) water over your face for 30–60 seconds, or shave right after a shower. Warm water softens your facial hair — which is surprisingly tough — making it much easier for the blade to cut cleanly. Shaving on dry skin is the single most common beginner mistake and the primary cause of cuts and redness.

2
Apply Shaving Cream or Gel

Squeeze about a 10p-coin sized amount of shaving cream or gel into your palm, add a few drops of warm water, and work it into a lather between your hands. Then apply it to your face using circular motions. The cream needs to cover every area you plan to shave — it acts as the cushion between the blade and your skin.

3
Shave in the Direction Hair Grows (With the Grain)

This is the most important rule for a beginner. Run your finger across your cheek — the direction that feels smooth is “with the grain.” Always shave in that direction on your first pass. Going against the grain might seem like it gets a closer result, but for beginners it causes redness and irritation that can last for hours.

4
Use Short, Light Strokes — Zero Pressure

Hold the razor gently and let its weight do the work. You do not need to press down. Short strokes of 3–5cm, rinsing the blade in warm water every couple of passes to clear hair and cream. Long, sweeping strokes from sideburn to chin look good in adverts and produce inconsistent results in real bathrooms.

5
Rinse with Cool Water When Done

When you have finished shaving, rinse your face with cool (not ice cold) water for about 30 seconds. This calms the skin, reduces any redness, and helps close the follicles you have just shaved over. Pat — don’t rub — your face dry with a clean towel.

6
Apply an Aftershave Balm (Not Splash)

Skip the alcohol-based aftershave splash for now — it stings and is not actually beneficial for beginners’ skin. Instead, apply a small amount of aftershave balm or even a plain moisturiser. This soothes the skin and helps it recover. Your face will feel and look noticeably better than skipping this step entirely.

Do’s and Don’ts for Your First Shave

Do These Things

  • Always warm your skin with water first
  • Use shaving cream or gel every time
  • Shave with the grain on your first pass
  • Use light, short strokes with zero pressure
  • Rinse the blade regularly between passes
  • Finish with a cool rinse and a balm
  • Be patient — technique improves quickly

Avoid These Mistakes

  • Shaving dry skin without any prep
  • Pressing the razor hard against your face
  • Using the same blade for months on end
  • Shaving against the grain straight away
  • Rushing — shaving too fast increases cuts
  • Using aerosol foam as a long-term choice
  • Skipping aftercare entirely

Common First-Shave Questions

How often should I shave when I first start?
Shave when you need to — when growth becomes visible and you want it gone. There is no minimum or ideal frequency at first. Shaving too often when there is barely any hair just irritates the skin unnecessarily. As your beard gets more consistent, you will naturally develop a frequency that suits your growth rate and preference.
I cut myself — what should I do?
Minor nicks are common at first. Press a clean piece of tissue paper or toilet paper lightly against the cut for 30–60 seconds — this is usually enough to stop the bleeding. An alum block (a natural mineral rock available for around £3) is also excellent for stopping small razor cuts very quickly. They heal fast and become less common as technique improves.
My skin goes red after shaving — is that normal?
Some mild redness immediately after a first shave is completely normal as skin adjusts to a new routine. If it persists for more than an hour, it is usually a sign of too much pressure, against-the-grain shaving, a dull blade, or skipping the post-shave care step. Address those variables and redness should decrease significantly within a few sessions.
When should I change my blade?
For beginners: when the blade starts to feel like it is dragging rather than gliding. As a rough guide, a quality cartridge should last 5–8 shaves. You will notice when it is past its best — the shave feels rougher and you need more pressure. Change it at that point.