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‘Short hair is dying out’: 30% rise in cost of UK haircuts, not fashion, is driving the change

about 14 hours ago
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Skin fades and sculpted bobs are out.Messy tops and longer locks are in.For fashion hawks, the move towards lengthier hair is hardly news, but it may not be fashion alone that is driving the shift.Rising costs and tightened belts are among the reasons some believe are behind the trend for longer hair.The average cost of a haircut for men and women in the UK has soared by more than 30% since 2020, according to government data.

As a result, many of us have adapted our hairstyles.“We’re still in a cost of living crisis,” said Phil Smith.“Most people are struggling.Anything that’s going to give your hair a bit of a longer life is going to stay in fashion.”For Smith, the owner of the salon Smith England in Salisbury, which caters to men and women, the move towards longer-lasting styles has hit business.

“It’s been disastrous,” he said.“People are not coming in as often.”The most common shift he has seen among men is a move away from skin fades, where hair on the sides is cut tightly and blended to created a faded look – a style that needs regular maintenance.Instead, people have opted for taper fades, which provide a similar blended look but retain more length on the upper sides and top.“Short hair is dying out and longer hairstyles are back in fashion,” he said.

“When the taper fade is done properly, it lasts that little bit longer.The skin fade lasts two weeks and you’ve got to do it again.When the taper grows out, it looks a bit cooler and messier.”Mullets are also back in fashion, but Smith has a note of caution for those wanting the in-demand do.“If it’s been cut badly, it’s just a throwback to Chris Waddle.

”The collision of the cost of living crisis with the salon is most keenly felt by women, who have traditionally paid more for their hair styling than men.Smith said here too, there have been cost-influenced fashion trends.The treatment that has undergone the largest change is hair colouring.Dyed roots, which need to be redone every 10 to 12 weeks, are out.Balayage, where colour is applied directly to the hair, is all the rage.

This treatment only requires a bi-yearly visit to the salon.“It looks like sun-kissed ends, lovely hair that’s being lifted by the sunshine,” he said.In his own shop, Smith said he has had to raise his prices by about 15% to 20% as rising costs, including the recent national insurance rise and inflation on salon products, hit hard.“I’ve been doing this for 41 years and this is by far the hardest I’ve ever seen it.The recession and 2008 banking crisis was a walk in the park compared with how things are now,” he said.

Bobby Gordon, the owner of the men’s barber Fella, which has branches in London and Kent, has found the climate similarly challenging.“There’s a limit to what people will pay for certain things,” he said.“It’s the same with a haircut.I think the work has been cheapened for a very long time and we’re playing catch-up.”“For a long time, people just assumed a men’s haircut was a tenner.

But the quality of work that barbers are doing now is, on the whole, a lot better.”He said the skin fade and shorter styles in general were on their way out.“Hair couldn’t get any shorter unless we started to take people’s scalps off,” he said.He has been forced to raise his prices owing to rising costs, but time is also a factor.“Clients are more demanding, they know what they’re after.

They’re not bringing in a picture of a footballer like they did a long time ago,They’ve seen stuff on Instagram and the cuts people want now take a long time to do,It’s not a five-minute job, they take 40 to 45 minutes to do, maybe even an hour,” he said,With longer styles booming in popularity, Fella has introduced a “back and sides” option to entice those who don’t want to pay full whack for a touch-up,Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotion“It’s been quite popular,” he said.

“We felt that with the way styles are changing, people don’t necessarily want a full haircut and they find the back and sides to be the problem areas,”Richard Scorer, the creative director of the women’s salon chain Haringtons, said people were “having higher-value services left less often”,He has seen a similar surge in demand for balayage treatments,“Time is a big issue for people,People used to come in every week and have a blow dry.

Now, they’re coming in less regularly, so they want services that last,” he said.Scorer said his salons, located around the Thames Valley, are at the “higher end of the market” for the area.Despite this, he has seen new customers expecting to level up their treatments, especially as prices in less-luxury hairdressers have also risen.“People want experiences now, having a haircut here is a lovely experience,” he said.“Beware of false economies.

If you come to a salon like ours, the initial price might be more, but we do things like fringe trims for free for three months.”Taper fade For those who still want a bit of tightness in their cut, the taper fade offers a good balance between some shortness on the sides while retaining some volumising length on top.Because it’s left longer towards the blended top of the head, when it grows out it still retains a good shape, which means less frequent visits to the barber.Mod cut This longer, textured trim will give your mop some flexibility.You can leave it soft and unkempt and still look fresh or apply some product for a more defined look.

The fringe also gives you some hair to play with, which can be slightly parted or left to sit on your forehead.This cut can be done every four to six weeks.Forward graduation This layered, textured cut will give your long, luscious locks some bounce and make your facial features pop.It involves cutting shorter layers in the front and longer layers in the back, which will make it grow out more evenly.It is a particularly good style if you want to add some shape, volume and bounce to long, flowing hair.

Square layered haircut This boxy cut, which involves cutting layers at a 90-degree angle to the head shape, will give your hair a neat but bouncy look.Like the forward graduation, the layered cuts mean it will grow out more evenly and is fairly maintenance-free.
technologySee all
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Louis Vuitton says UK customer data stolen in cyber-attack

Louis Vuitton has said the data of some UK customers has been stolen, as it became the latest retailer targeted by cyber hackers.The retailer, the leading brand of the French luxury group LVMH, said an unauthorised third party had accessed its UK operation’s systems and obtained information such as names, contact details and purchase history.The brand, which last week said its Korean operation had suffered a similar cyber-attack, told customers that no financial data such as bank details had been compromised.“While we have no evidence that your data has been misused to date, phishing attempts, fraud attempts, or unauthorised use of your information may occur,” the email said.The company said it had notified the relevant authorities, including the Information Commissioner’s Office

2 days ago
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The CEO who never was: how Linda Yaccarino was set up to fail at Elon Musk’s X

In May 2023, when Linda Yaccarino, an NBC advertising executive, joined what was then still known as Twitter, she was given a tall order: repair the company’s relationship with advertisers after a chaotic year of being owned by Elon Musk. But just weeks after she became CEO, Musk posted an antisemitic tweet that drove away major brands such as Disney, Paramount, NBCUniversal, Comcast, Lionsgate and Warner Bros Discovery to pause their advertising on the platform. Musk delivered an apology for the tweet later at a conference – which he called the worst post he’s ever done – but it came with a message to advertisers, specifically the Disney CEO Bob Iger: “Go fuck yourselves.” Yaccarino was in the audience of the conference.“I don’t want them to advertise,” he said

4 days ago
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AI-generated child sexual abuse videos surging online, watchdog says

The number of videos online of child sexual abuse generated by artificial intelligence has surged as paedophiles have pounced on developments in the technology.The Internet Watch Foundation said AI videos of abuse had “crossed the threshold” of being near-indistinguishable from “real imagery” and had sharply increased in prevalence online this year.In the first six months of 2025, the UK-based internet safety watchdog verified 1,286 AI-made videos with child sexual abuse material (CSAM) that broke the law, compared with two in the same period last year.The IWF said just over 1,000 of the videos featured category A abuse, the classification for the most severe type of material.The organisation said the multibillion-dollar investment spree in AI was producing widely available video-generation models that were being manipulated by paedophiles

4 days ago
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Children limiting own smartphone use to manage mental health, survey finds

Children are increasingly taking breaks from their smartphones to better manage their mental health, personal safety and concentration spans, research has revealed.They are reacting to growing concerns that spending too much time online can be harmful by taking control of their own social media and smartphone use rather than relying on parents to enforce limits, according to experts.The number of 12- to 15-year-olds who take breaks from smartphones, computers and iPads rose by 18% to 40% since 2022, according to the audience research company GWI, drawing on a survey of 20,000 young people and their parents across 18 countries.Prof Sonia Livingstone, the director of the LSE’s Digital Futures for Children centre, said these findings were echoed in soon to be published research, which has found that children and young people are trying various options to manage how their online lives affect their wellbeing, including taking a break from social media, distracting themselves from negativity online, seeking more positive experiences on the internet and in some cases quitting social media altogether.Livingstone said: “Children have got the message – from their parents, the media, their own experiences – that too much social media isn’t always good for them

4 days ago
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UK government’s deal with Google ‘dangerously naive’, say campaigners

Google has agreed a sweeping deal with the UK government to provide free technology to the public sector from the NHS to local councils– a move campaigners have called “dangerously naive”.The US company will be asked to “upskill” tens of thousands of civil servants in technology, including in using artificial intelligence, as part of an agreement that will not require the government to pay. It is considered in Whitehall to be giving Google “a foot in the door” as the digitisation of public services accelerates.However, the agreement prompted concerns about the precariousness of UK public data potentially being held on US servers amid the unpredictable leadership of Donald Trump.The Department of Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) said Google Cloud, which provides databases, machine learning and computing power, had “agreed to work with the UK government in helping public services use advanced tech to shake off decades old ‘ball and chain’ legacy contracts which leave essential services vulnerable to cyber-attack”

4 days ago
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Linda Yaccarino stepping down as CEO of Elon Musk’s X

The CEO of X, Elon Musk’s social network, announced on Wednesday she would resign.“After two incredible years, I’ve decided to step down as CEO of 𝕏,” Linda Yaccarino wrote.Musk replied to her tweet: “Thank you for your contributions.”The outgoing CEO said, “When @elonmusk and I first spoke of his vision for X, I knew it would be the opportunity of a lifetime to carry out the extraordinary mission of this company. I’m immensely grateful to him for entrusting me with the responsibility of protecting free speech, turning the company around, and transforming X into the Everything App

4 days ago
politicsSee all
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Reform wants to cut council diversity roles. The problem is there are already barely any

about 16 hours ago
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Unite attacks Angela Rayner over ‘abhorrent’ handling of Birmingham bin strikes

1 day ago
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Starmer and Reeves promised honesty about public finances. Can they stay the course?

1 day ago
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Zarah Sultana launches fundraising drive for new leftwing party

1 day ago
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Nearly 60 Labour MPs call for UK to immediately recognise Palestinian state

1 day ago
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MPs and political candidates face ‘industrial’ levels of abuse, minister says

1 day ago