Cut & Style · Sub-chapter 08
The big chop is one of the most significant hair decisions a person makes. It's also one of the most researched — because once you've done it, there's no immediate undo. This guide covers the decision, the preparation, and the first weeks after.
87 how-to's · Updated 1 May 2026 · Avg. 4 min per piece · Edited by Nelly · Beauty & Style Director
Editor's note
The big chop has two different origin stories depending on who's doing it: for someone transitioning from chemically relaxed to natural hair, it's a milestone. For someone who's simply decided to go short, it's a style choice. Both are valid — but they need different preparation and have different first-week experiences. Below: everything organised by starting point, with the decision, the execution, and what happens next.
Big chop approaches
- Full transition big chop — removing all relaxed ends at once
- Gradual transition — multiple cuts over 6–12 months to preserve some length
- Style reset big chop — simply wanting to go dramatically short
- Damage reset big chop — cutting through significant heat or chemical damage
All big chop how-tos
- How to decide if you're ready for the big chop
- What to tell your stylist before a big chop
- The big chop for transitioning hair — what to expect
- TWA styling: the first month after the big chop
- Big chop regret — why it happens and how to manage it
- Growing out after the big chop — your roadmap