The best way to remove facial hair from your face, regardless of your gender identity, will depend on: (1) your pain tolerance, (2) how frequently you want to remove your hair, (3) your skin type and skin color, and (4) whether you want a temporary or permanent result. Basically, there's no single "best" way. Instead, you've got options:
- Physical hair removal, like shaving, waxing, threading, and plucking, which cut off the hair or pull the hair out from the follicle
- Chemical hair removal (aka “depilatories” or hair removal creams) which dissolve the hair from the root
- Laser hair removal, which works by “emitting a beam of light that destroys the root of the hair with each treatment,” says Dr. Zeichner
1. Shaving facial hair
When it comes to removing facial hair via shaving, you can either use a dermaplane razor or a regular razor. A dermaplane razor is great for getting a gentle surface-level shave and mild exfoliation on dry skin. A traditional razor (either a single-blade safety razor or a multi-blade disposable razor) is best for getting a super-close shave with coarse hair on wet skin.
2. Dermaplaning facial hair
If standing in the mirror with a dermaplaning razor to your face makes you nervous, opt for a professional dermaplaning treatment with your dermatologist or aesthetician. Not only will you walk away with baby-soft skin, but you’ll also leave behind up to three weeks’ worth of dead skin.
3. Waxing facial hair
The idea of waxing your face at home might make all your muscles tighten, but I promise it’s not as bad as it sounds. The major benefit here is the hair will take longer to grow back, since you’re removing it from the follicle rather than just cutting it off at the service.
Although you can always get a professional wax (which is recommended for newbies), there are also tons of at-home waxing kits you can find that come with preloaded wax strips that require zero expertise or mess. Other waxing options include waxing kits where you heat up the wax yourself, smooth it over your (clean) skin, cover with a strip, then peel off quickly.
4. Sugaring facial hair
If you want to remove facial hair in a cleaner and more natural way, you may love sugaring—a pre-made or DIY alternative to traditional chemical-based waxes. Sugaring uses a paste that hardens on your skin to rip out facial hair (or any hair), and can be better for sensitive or allergy-prone skin that can't handle traditional wax formulas.
5. Tweezing facial hair
If you want to tackle small areas like eyebrows, or you’ve just got a few strays you want to remove (lookin’ at you, rogue chin hair), all you need is a pair of tweezers. Clamp them firmly over the base of an individual hair, then pull firmly in the direction of hair growth. And if you’re wondering if plucking or tweezing will cause more to grow back in its place, let me save you the Googling: It won’t.
5. Threading facial hair
Threading is an old-school technique that uses teeny-tiny strings of thread to pluck out hairs. Essentially, the threads are twisted in unison to grab each hair and pull it out from the root in the same style of tweezing but with the ability to pull out many hairs at once. Which is why it's definitely beneficial to go see a professional threader instead of trying to do it at home.
Lots of people (@ my bestie) swear by threading because of how precise and quick it is, but without as much trauma to your skin as waxing. But FYI: It can be fairly painful (it feels like tweezing, but x10, tbh). However, your smooth, hair-free results can last up to four weeks.
6. Epilating facial hair
Think of epilators as a bunch of fast, motorized tweezers all operating at once. Glide the epilator slowly over the hair on your face and watch as the tiny tweezers grab and pluck multiple hairs from their follicle, just like with waxing.
7. Depilatory creams for removing facial hair
Depilatory creams—or hair-removal creams—use chemicals to break down and dissolve the base of your hair from the follicle, so it can be wiped cleanly away. Pick up a cream that’s safe for your face, follow the instructions, then wait the recommended time before wiping it off.
Just remember: If you have sensitive skin, acne, or skin conditions like eczema or psoriasis, you’ll want to skip this option because the chemicals and the process can be really irritating.
8. Laser hair removal for facial hair
Laser-hair removal uses wavelengths of light to target and heat up the hair follicle to destroy a portion of it with each treatment, helping to reduce the overall number of hair follicles in your skin. Just know that in-office devices are significantly more effective and faster-acting, though you can still get decent, long-lasting results with an at-home laser-hair-removal device.
9. Electrolysis hair removal
If you're looking for a permanent facial-hair removal situation, the only option out there is electrolysis. It involves a dermatologist or an electrologist permanently destroying your hair follicle using electricity and heat. They'll insert a micro-fine probe into your pore, zap it with electricity to kill the hair follicle, and then pull the dead hair out with tweezers (quick electrolysis demo for your viewing pleasure). “You’re basically killing both the cells in the hair follicle and the root of the hair itself, so another hair won’t grow in its place later.” electrologist Dana Elise previously told Cosmo.
Sound painful? It is, Elise says. But “your hair will no longer grow and will not come back after you’ve completed your electrolysis sessions,” dermatologist Karan Lal, MD, previously told Cosmo. So if you never, ever, ever want to pluck or shave or wax that hair again, electrolysis is the only option.