HOW TO
SHAVE YOUR
HEAD
AT HOME
Shaving your own head is easier than it looks — once you understand the technique, the grain map, and the aftercare. Here’s everything you need for your first (and every subsequent) head shave.
- ✅Use a quality cartridge razor — not a single blade to start
- ✅Shave after a hot shower, not before
- ✅Work in sections — front to back
- ✅Use a hand mirror for the back; don’t rush
- ✅Apply SPF 50 — your scalp has never faced the sun
- ⚠️Expect nicks on attempt 1. They’re minor and stop fast.
The decision to shave your head is easier than the logistics of doing it yourself for the first time. The back of your head has contours you’ve never navigated with a razor, hair that grows in multiple directions, and skin that’s never been shaved before — which makes it more sensitive than your face. None of this is a problem if you go in prepared.
This guide covers the entire process: preparation, technique, sectioning, aftercare, and the scalp SPF requirement that most guides completely fail to mention. Read it once before you start.
Before You Begin: Prep Matters More Than Usual
Scalp skin is different from facial skin. It’s generally less accustomed to blade contact, has a different density of follicles, and — particularly at the crown and back — has complex multi-directional hair growth that you need to understand before the razor arrives.
Trim Down to Stubble First If Starting from Length
If you have more than 3–4mm of hair, use clippers (guard zero) before the razor. Attempting to shave longer hair directly with a cartridge razor will clog the blade within three strokes and produce a difficult, uneven result. Get to stubble first. Then shave.
Hot Shower Directly Before Shaving
The scalp — especially the nape and crown — needs thorough warming before a blade touches it. Five minutes under a hot shower softens the follicles and opens the skin’s pores. This is even more important for head shaving than face shaving: scalp hair is typically coarser.
Learn Your Grain Direction Before You Shave
Run your fingertips across your scalp in multiple directions — you’ll feel resistance in one direction (against the grain) and smoothness in another. The crown typically has a circular growth pattern. The nape often grows downward. Map this before the razor appears.
The Shaving Sequence
Apply Shave Cream Generously — All Over
Use a generous amount of shave cream or gel across the entire scalp. You can’t see most of your head — the lather helps you track which areas you’ve shaved. Work it in with circular motions to lift the hairs before the blade arrives.
Start at the Hairline and Work Backward
Begin at your front hairline and shave backward toward the crown in smooth, even strokes. This is the easiest section to see and navigate. Apply zero pressure — the weight of the razor is sufficient. Rinse the blade every three strokes.
Shave Downward on the Sides
The sides of the head typically grow downward — shave with the grain initially (downward) for the first pass. Short strokes, never long sweeping ones. The head curves; short strokes let you feel the contour. Use your non-shaving hand to tilt your head for access.
The Back — Use a Hand Mirror and Take Your Time
This is where first-time head shavers encounter trouble. Hold a hand mirror behind your head while facing your bathroom mirror. Work in small sections from the crown downward. The nape of the neck needs particular care — the skin here is soft and the grain often changes direction. Short strokes, light pressure, no rushing.
⚠️ The Most Common First-Time Mistake
Pressing too hard on the crown. The crown is rounded and the blade naturally wants to slide off the curve. Compensate by using very light, controlled strokes and letting the blade do the work. Heavy pressure on a curved surface is how nicks happen.
Aftercare for Scalp Skin
Cold Water Rinse
Rinse thoroughly in cool water to close follicles and remove any lather residue before applying products.
Scalp Balm
Apply an alcohol-free, fragrance-free balm immediately. Your scalp skin is fresh and permeable — standard aftershave will sting severely.
SPF 50 — Non-Negotiable
Scalp skin has never seen the sun. Apply SPF 50 before going outside every time — your scalp is at high risk of sunburn and long-term UV damage.
Grain Direction Reference
| Scalp Zone | Typical Growth Direction | First Pass Direction |
|---|---|---|
| Front hairline | Forward / downward | Backward toward crown |
| Crown | Circular / multi-directional | Multiple short passes, outward |
| Sides (above ear) | Downward | Downward (ear to ear) |
| Nape of neck | Downward | Downward, short strokes |
| Back of head | Downward and outward | Crown toward nape |
After your second or third head shave, the process will feel entirely natural. The first attempt takes 20–25 minutes and is largely about learning your own contours. By the fifth shave, most men are done in under 10 minutes and have a result that matches anything a barber can produce.
