# Haircuts in Chiang Mai: barbers and salons for foreigners

> Where to get a haircut in Chiang Mai: local barbers, hipster barbershops and salons — honest price tiers, blonde-colour caveats and tipping norms.

There comes a point in every long stay — usually around week six — when the person in the mirror stops looking like a relaxed remote worker and starts looking like someone who has recently emerged from the jungle. The good news is that Chiang Mai is one of the easiest and cheapest places on earth to get a genuinely good haircut. The only trick is knowing which of the city's three grooming worlds to walk into, and how to explain yourself once you're in the chair.

## The lie of the land

Chiang Mai's haircut scene sorts itself into three tiers, and every one of them costs less than home. At the humble end are the neighbourhood barbershops: one or two chairs, a fan, and a proper haircut for roughly **60–150 baht**. In the middle sit the modern barbershops clustered around Nimman, the Old City and Santitham, where about **250–500 baht** buys a consultation, an unhurried cut and usually a head massage. At the top are the full salons, where a cut is still only a few hundred baht but colour and treatments can climb into the low thousands. Even that top tier is a fraction of what you'd pay in London — one of the many quiet ways your money stretches here, as our [cost of living guide](/blog/cost-of-living-chiang-mai) sets out.

## The neighbourhood barber: fast, cheap and quietly brilliant

Wander [whichever part of town you've settled in](/blog/chiang-mai-neighbourhoods) and you'll find one within minutes: a small shopfront, a vinyl chair, sometimes a spinning pole, always a wall calendar. These are barbers who have often been cutting hair for decades, and what they can do with a set of clippers is honestly humbling. Short back and sides, buzz cuts, crisp necklines — fifteen minutes, no fuss, done. Where they're less at home is longer scissor work and anything fashion-forward; ask for a textured crop with a skin fade and you may receive a look of polite bafflement. But if your needs are simple, this is one of Chiang Mai's great bargains, and the fastest possible route to feeling like a local.

![A traditional Thai neighbourhood barbershop with a vinyl chair and spinning barber pole](/blog/barbers-hair-salons-chiang-mai/visual.webp)

## Modern barbershops: fades, pomade and hot towels

For anything more considered, head for the newer breed of barbershop — you'll spot them by the filament bulbs, the leather chairs and the shelf of matte clay. Nimman has the densest cluster, though the Old City and Santitham have caught up fast. English is usually workable, portfolios live on Instagram, and the fades are genuinely excellent: Thai barbers cut an enormous amount of tight, precise short hair, and it shows. This is also where to bring your beard. A trim and shape-up is a modest add-on, while the full hot-towel, straight-razor shave — lather, steam and a finish your video calls will notice — is one of the best-value small luxuries in the city.

## Salons, colour and the blonde question

Full salons handle the rest: colour, treatments, straightening, long scissor work. For a simple cut, you can walk into most of them with confidence. Colour on Western hair is where caution earns its keep. Thai hair is generally thicker, darker and responds to bleach differently, so a colourist who produces flawless results on local hair may simply not have handled much fine European hair — and blonde work is the most unforgiving of all. Quality varies enormously from salon to salon. Seek out the places that advertise experience with Western hair types, ask to see photos of hair like yours, and insist on a **strand test** (plus a patch test for dyes) before anyone opens a bottle of bleach. A good salon will agree happily; a shrug is your cue to leave. And if the wash-and-head-massage part turns out to be your favourite bit, our [guide to day spas](/blog/day-spas-chiang-mai) is the logical next step.

## How to ask for what you want

The universal language of barbering is photographs. Save two or three to your phone — front and side — and show, don't tell. Better still, clipper guard numbers are the same everywhere on earth: a **number 2** is six millimetres in Chiang Mai exactly as it is in Croydon, so "number 2 on the sides, scissors on top" plus a photo gets a near-perfect result with zero shared vocabulary. Words like "fade", "undercut" and "layers" are widely understood in the modern shops; elsewhere, Google Translate fills the gaps. The one thing to avoid is vagueness — "just a tidy-up" translates poorly in any language.

![A phone showing a haircut photo held up beside numbered clipper guards, the universal barbershop translators](/blog/barbers-hair-salons-chiang-mai/visual-2.webp)

## Tipping, walk-ins and when to book

Tipping is appreciated but genuinely not expected. At a local or mid-range barbershop, rounding up or leaving **20–50 baht** earns a warm smile and a better welcome next time; at a Western-oriented salon, something nearer ten per cent is a kind gesture for work you love. Handing it directly to the person who cut your hair is the nicest way to do it. As for timing: neighbourhood barbers are strictly walk-in, and the wait is rarely long. Popular modern barbershops increasingly take bookings through Facebook or LINE, and a few of the most sought-after are booking-only — check before trekking across town. Salons will usually take walk-ins for cuts, but book ahead for colour and allow a couple of hours. Then step out freshly trimmed, order a coffee and enjoy one of the smaller but more satisfying milestones of [settling into Chiang Mai](/blog/settling-in-chiang-mai): you now have "a place".
