Understanding Your Hair Type: The Complete Guide

Published Feb 2026 · 13 min read

Your hair type is as unique as your fingerprint. Understanding it is the single most important step toward achieving healthy, beautiful hair that looks and feels its best. Yet most people go through life using the wrong products, fighting their natural texture, and wondering why their hair never cooperates — all because they never learned what their hair truly needs.

This comprehensive guide will help you identify your exact hair type using the widely recognized Andre Walker Hair Typing System, understand the science behind your hair's behavior, and discover the specific care strategies that will transform your hair from frustrating to fabulous. Whether you have pin-straight strands, bouncy curls, or tight coils, this knowledge is the foundation for every good hair day.

The Hair Type Classification System

The Andre Walker Hair Typing System is the most widely used hair classification method in the world. Created by Oprah Winfrey's longtime hairstylist Andre Walker, this system categorizes hair into four main types based on curl pattern, with three subcategories each based on the diameter and tightness of the curl or wave.

Each main type has three subcategories (A, B, C) that range from the loosest to the tightest pattern within that type. It is important to note that many people have more than one hair type on their head — it is perfectly normal to have type 2B at the crown and type 2C at the nape, for example. Understanding your dominant type while acknowledging these variations is key to effective care.

Pro Tip: To accurately determine your hair type, examine your hair when it is freshly washed and air-dried without any products. Products, heat styling, and even the weight of water can alter your natural curl pattern, giving you a misleading picture of your true hair type.

Type 1: Straight Hair

Straight hair lies flat from root to tip with no natural curl or wave pattern. It is the shiniest of all hair types because the natural oils from the scalp (sebum) can travel easily down the smooth hair shaft, creating a natural gleam. However, this same property means straight hair can also appear oily faster than other types.

Type 1 Subtypes
1A — Fine Straight Very thin, soft strands with almost no body or volume. Hair is wispy and can be difficult to hold a curl. Most common in individuals of Northern European and East Asian descent.
1B — Medium Straight Medium-thickness strands with more body than 1A. Has a slight bend at the ends. The most common straight hair type, offering a good balance of manageability and volume.
1C — Coarse Straight Thick, strong strands that are resistant to curling and styling. Often has a slight natural wave at the ends when grown long. Common in Asian and Middle Eastern hair types.

Care Tips for Straight Hair

Type 2: Wavy Hair

Wavy hair falls between straight and curly, forming loose S-shaped waves that add natural body and movement. It is one of the most versatile hair types because it can be styled straight or enhanced into more defined curls. However, wavy hair can also be the most unpredictable — humidity, product choice, and even how you sleep can dramatically affect its pattern.

Type 2 Subtypes
2A — Loose Waves Barely-there waves that are flat at the roots with a slight bend starting at the mid-shaft. Fine to medium texture. Easy to straighten but curls fall out quickly.
2B — Defined Waves More pronounced S-shaped waves that start closer to the head. Medium texture with a tendency toward frizz. Often has a mix of wave patterns throughout the head.
2C — Deep Waves Strong, well-defined waves that can border on curly. Thick, coarse texture that is prone to frizz. Starts at the roots and has a distinct S-pattern throughout.

Care Tips for Wavy Hair

Pro Tip: The "squish to condish" technique works wonders for wavy hair. After applying conditioner, cup sections of your hair and squeeze upward toward your scalp, squishing the water and conditioner into your strands. This technique encourages wave formation and helps your hair absorb more moisture.

Type 3: Curly Hair

Curly hair has a definite S-shape or spiral pattern that forms springy, bouncy curls. It is typically full-bodied and voluminous, but also prone to dryness and frizz because the curl pattern makes it harder for natural oils to travel down the hair shaft. Curly hair requires more moisture than straight or wavy types and benefits from gentle handling to maintain curl definition.

Type 3 Subtypes
3A — Loose Curls Large, loose spiral curls about the diameter of sidewalk chalk. Shiny, well-defined curls with a looser pattern. Most prone to straightening out from weight if hair is long.
3B — Medium Curls Springy ringlets about the diameter of a marker. More volume and less shine than 3A. Can have a combination of curl textures and is prone to frizz in humidity.
3C — Tight Curls Tight, corkscrew curls about the diameter of a pencil. Very dense and voluminous. Can experience significant shrinkage, with curls appearing much shorter than stretched length.

Care Tips for Curly Hair

Type 4: Coily Hair

Coily hair is characterized by tight curls, coils, or zigzag patterns that may or may not form visible curl clumps. It is the most fragile of all hair types due to the many twist points along each strand where breakage can occur. Despite often appearing dense and thick, coily hair can actually be quite fine in strand diameter — the density comes from the tight coil pattern that creates significant volume.

Coily hair experiences the most shrinkage of all hair types, with some subtypes shrinking to as little as 25% of their actual stretched length. This means that a person with 12 inches of coily hair might appear to have only 3 inches of length. Understanding and accepting shrinkage as a natural characteristic rather than a problem to fix is an important part of embracing coily hair.

Type 4 Subtypes
4A — Soft Coils Tightly coiled S-pattern curls about the diameter of a crochet needle. Visible curl definition when wet. Retains some moisture and has a springy, spongy texture.
4B — Z-Pattern Coils Sharp zigzag pattern rather than a spiral. Less defined curl clumps. Very dense and cotton-like texture. Strands bend in sharp angles rather than curving smoothly.
4C — Tight Coils The tightest coil pattern with very little visible definition. Similar to 4B but more densely packed. Experiences the most shrinkage of all hair types, up to 75%. Extremely versatile for styling.

Care Tips for Coily Hair

Pro Tip: Type 4 hair is incredibly versatile and can be styled in countless ways — from twist-outs and wash-and-gos to elaborate updos and protective styles. The key to healthy coily hair is gentle handling, consistent moisture, and patience. Embrace the shrinkage, celebrate the volume, and remember that length retention is a marathon, not a sprint.

Hair Porosity: The Hidden Factor

Beyond curl pattern, hair porosity is arguably the most important factor in determining how to care for your hair. Porosity refers to your hair's ability to absorb and retain moisture, and it is determined by the condition of the cuticle layer — the outermost protective layer of each hair strand.

Low Porosity

The cuticle layer is tightly closed, making it difficult for moisture to penetrate. Low porosity hair tends to repel water, takes a long time to dry, and products tend to sit on top rather than being absorbed.

Medium (Normal) Porosity

The cuticle layer is slightly raised, allowing moisture to enter and exit at a healthy rate. This is the easiest porosity level to maintain and requires the least specialized care.

High Porosity

The cuticle layer is raised or damaged, allowing moisture to enter easily but also escape quickly. High porosity can be genetic or caused by chemical processing, heat damage, or environmental factors.

Pro Tip: To test your porosity at home, take a clean strand of shed hair and drop it into a glass of room-temperature water. Wait 2–4 minutes. If it floats on top, you have low porosity. If it sinks slowly to the middle, you have medium porosity. If it sinks quickly to the bottom, you have high porosity. Test multiple strands from different areas of your head for the most accurate result.

Hair Density vs. Hair Thickness

These two terms are often confused, but they describe completely different characteristics. Understanding the distinction is essential for choosing the right products and styles.

Hair Density

Hair density refers to how many individual hair strands are on your head — how closely packed the follicles are. You can have thin strand thickness but high density (lots of fine hairs), or thick strand thickness but low density (fewer coarse hairs).

Hair Thickness (Width)

Hair thickness refers to the diameter of each individual strand. This is determined by genetics and affects how your hair responds to products and styling.

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How to Determine Your Hair Type

Ready to identify your hair type? Follow this step-by-step self-assessment process for the most accurate results:

Step 1: The Wash Test

  1. Wash your hair with a gentle, sulfate-free shampoo
  2. Apply a lightweight conditioner and rinse thoroughly
  3. Do not apply any styling products
  4. Allow your hair to air-dry completely — no blow-drying, no touching, no scrunching
  5. Once fully dry, examine the natural pattern that forms

Step 2: Pattern Assessment

Step 3: Subcategory Refinement

Once you have identified your main type, refine the subcategory:

Step 4: Porosity Test

Conduct the water float test described above. Additionally, spray a small section of clean, dry hair with water and observe: does it absorb immediately (high porosity), after a few seconds (medium), or bead up and sit on top (low porosity)?

Step 5: Density and Thickness Check

Pro Tip: Take photos of your hair at each step of this process. Having a visual record of your natural texture, curl pattern, and how your hair looks when fully air-dried is invaluable when communicating with stylists and when shopping for products. Many online hair type quizzes are inaccurate — your own eyes and hands are the most reliable tools.

Best Products by Hair Type

Once you know your hair type, you can make much more informed product choices. Here is a general guide to the types of products that work best for each category:

Type 1 (Straight): Lightweight and Volumizing

Type 2 (Wavy): Enhancing and Anti-Frizz

Type 3 (Curly): Moisturizing and Defining

Type 4 (Coily): Heavy Moisture and Sealing

Understanding your hair type is a journey, not a destination. As your hair changes with age, seasons, hormonal shifts, and chemical treatments, your care routine should evolve too. The most important takeaway from this guide is that there is no single "best" hair type — every type has its own unique beauty, challenges, and strengths. The best hair is healthy hair, and healthy hair starts with understanding and working with what nature gave you rather than against it.

Written by Hair Style Editorial Team

Our team of licensed hairstylists and beauty professionals creates expert-reviewed, research-backed content to help you make confident hair decisions. Each article is fact-checked and updated regularly to reflect current trends and best practices.