Facial hair changes a face's apparent proportions more than almost any other grooming choice, because it sits directly on the jawline — the exact measurement that defines whether a face reads as square in the first place. A square face has a broad, angular forehead and a jaw with a defined, often 90-degree-adjacent corner at the hinge. Width stays consistent from temple to jaw rather than tapering, and the chin is flat or minimally curved rather than pointed.

How It's Grown and Shaped

How it's grown and shaped: Connected mustache and chin beard, cheeks and jawline kept clean-shaven. Adds length and a focal point at the chin without adding jaw width.

Why It Works

Why it works on a square jaw: This face shape's jaw reads as "the defining feature — strong, straight, with a visible corner at the angle." A beard that is wider jaws needing chin length rather than more width directly addresses that starting point. Soften the jaw's hard corner and add movement at the temples and chin. Rounded shapes — in a haircut's ends, in frame lenses, in a beard's edge — counter the squareness without erasing the jaw's natural strength, which most square-faced people are better served by softening than hiding.

Where to Be Careful

Where to be careful: Already-narrow or pointed chins, which the style would exaggerate further — if your jaw already leans that direction, ask your barber to reduce density slightly rather than following the standard shape exactly as described above.