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The Best Long Beard Trimmers, According to Professional Barbers

Once a beard reaches a certain length, the maintenance methods change. Long beards still require trimming to keep a sightly shape and style, but it’s a different beast than maintaining a half month’s worth of grown-out stubble on the chin and cheeks. This is why dedicated long beard trimmers are both necessary and convenient for maintaining hefty hair growth while giving it a pleasing shape. 

While the features of a long beard trimmer certainly matter, one’s technique is the most important part. The emphasis is on guards and trimming lengths for shorter beards, but lengthier facial hair almost always outgrows these devices and requires more TLC for the texture and shape. Also, keeping your face oriented the same way throughout the trim is paramount to the cut coming out evenly. 

SPY consulted a few different beard and grooming experts, including Steve Purcell, founder of Uppercut Deluxe grooming products, and Eric Bandholz, the founder of Beardbrand. Together they cover what to look for in long beard trimmers, followed by SPY’s rundown of the best devices for maintaining these fuller facial forests (with input from both experts).

In addition to the beard trimmer itself, the process requires a wide-tooth comb (like a rake comb), to detangle hairs and perhaps even a blow dryer to expedite the drying of the beard after a fresh rinse. It’s best practice to always trim a clean beard.

The Best Long Beard Trimmers: At a Glance

The Best Trimmer Overall

Brio Blackout Beardscape

Buy Now On Amazon $114.95 Jump to Details
The Best Value

Hatteker 5-in-1 Grooming Device

Buy Now On Amazon $36.99 Jump to Details
The Best Upgrade

BaBylissPRO Baberology BoostFX Trimmer

Buy Now On Amazon $189.99 Jump to Details
The Best Detail Trimmer

Wahl Precision Detail Trimmer

Buy Now On Amazon $9.09 Jump to Details
THE FASTEST CLEANUP

Remington Vacuum Beard Trimmer

Buy Now On Amazon $59.99 Jump to Details
THE BEST FOR LINEUPS

Andis Slimline Pro T-Blade Trimmer

Buy Now On Amazon $58.01 Jump to Details
THE BEST SCISSORS

Beardbrand Trimming Scissors

Buy Now $49.00 Jump to Details

What the Experts Say

The trimmer alone can’t take care of a longer beard, in fact, it’s the last step of a multi-step process. First up, according to Purcell, you should “give the beard a good blast with a blow dryer, points down to help smooth the beard ahead of trimming.” After that, he says to use the comb to work through any knots.

When trimming, the angle of the head should point in the same direction the entire time. “If you trim the same line but move your head to one side the cutting angle is going to change and your beard will be uneven,” he warns. “Using a comb to comb the hairs down and holding in place can also help, as it won’t add too much tension, whereas pulling the beard tight then trimming will cause an elastic effect and it will appear uneven when it relaxes.”

Guards Matter Less

Guards are essential for keeping shorter beards at a certain length, but most longer facial hairstyles have outgrown the guards, particularly below the chin. Some longer styles might actually have some shorter strands around the mustache and cheeks, which still require guards, but for the most part they’re less necessary. 

“Another potential exception is around the sideburns as you try to taper it from shorter to longer from the top of the ear towards the bottom of the beard,” said Bandholz. He notes that the “longest” guards tend to be around 18 millimeters or around ¾ of an inch, and when we’re talking “long” beards we’re talking longer than that. 

That’s not to say devices with multiple heads aren’t good for long beards. Purcell likes them for snipping strays, cleaning up the edges, or going shorter if you decide to chop one day.

Also, Get Some Facial Hair Scissors

Both experts suggest using facial hair scissors for spot-checking strays since it seems like every day there are two or three hairs mysterious hairs that are invisible until they’re an inch longer than everything else. 

It should go without saying, but don’t trim your beard with kitchen scissors. “Cutting a beard with kitchen scissors out of the drawer can damage and fray the ends of your hairs, which then causes a frizzy beard,” said Purcell. He explains that hair scissors have a much more balanced blade and a smooth cutting edge. “Typically for trimming a beard, a longer blade is better, especially on a longer beard. For barbers, the ideal scissor length is around six inches.”

Courtesy of Amazon
The Best Trimmer Overall

Here is Bandholz’s favorite beard trimmer for long beards. “Brio’s trimmer offers great battery life, the perfect upright angle for trimming long beards, guards for your sideburns, and a sharp ceramic blade to handle the most unruly beards,” he said.  

The device’s four-hour runtime and five-speed settings are also extremely attractive, and the powerful tool transitions well into maintaining shooter styles thanks to those aforementioned 1-18 millimeter trimming guards and a stubble-maintaining head that allows for styles with lengths of 1-1.9 millimeters.

Courtesy of Amazon
The Best Value

Key Specs: 90-minute runtime; 90-minute charge time; 5-minute quick charge; 1-16 millimeter trimming lengths; interchangeable heads for detailing, clipping, shaving, and nose hair trimming; waterproof; 1-year warranty

Why It’s Great: Somewhat surprisingly, this Amazon-favorite beard trimmer can go toe-to-toe with the best options available, and at a fraction of the cost. It might feel lightweight by comparison, but it has the muscle and precision necessary to tackle every task, including the ability to draw clean lines and snip at individual strays.

Courtesy of Amazon
The Best Upgrade

Key Specs: 4-hour runtime; 3-hour charge time; fully exposed T-blade for straight lines and precise snipping; dual-voltage corded use

Why It’s Great: BaByliss PRO is a favorite of Purcell’s and a mighty fine upgrade in terms of heft and performance. “They offer you all the tools a professional barber would use in a barbershop,” he said. “The fine teeth and fast motor make it perfect for tackling longer beards.”

Courtesy of Amazon
The Best Detail Trimmer

$9.09 $15.50

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Key Specs: Runs on an included AA battery; interchangeable heads include lined trimmer, detail trimmer, nose hair trimmer; and eyebrow guide comb

Why It’s Great: This pared-down device handles the simplest tasks and necessary edgework, all for less than $10. Keep it next to the combs and toothbrush, since it’s going to get almost daily use once everything is styled in place and requires a quick spot-checking.

Courtesy of Amazon
THE FASTEST CLEANUP

Key Specs: 90-minute runtime; 2-hour charge; 13 length settings (0.5 millimeter guardless or 2-18 millimeters with adjustable dial); vacuum belly captures up to 95% of hairs; precision trimmer for clean lines; water-resistant rinsing;  5-year warranty

Why It’s Great: While this is a fantastic time-saver for short stubble, it also helps suck up the vast majority of long-hair clippings too, so that there’s less cleanup on the backend of the cleaning (in terms of the sink ledge and bathroom floor, that is; be sure to at least rinse out the belly of this vacuum, too).

Courtesy of Amazon
THE BEST FOR LINEUPS

$58.01 $70.99

Buy Now On Amazon

Key Specs: 2-hour runtime, 2.5-hour charge time; 5-minute quick charge; fully exposed T-blade for straight lines and precise snipping

Why It’s Great: This barbershop staple is a favorite for clean lines and fast spot checks, making it especially adept for long beards who want to maintain clear perimeters and shapely style.

Courtesy of Beardbrand
THE BEST SCISSORS

$49.00

Buy Now

Key Specs: 2.5-inch blades; 5.25-inch total length; TSA-approved; Japanese steel; 55–56 Rockwell Hardness rating (soft steel); hollow grind; semi-convex blade

Why It’s Great: There are a lot of ways to measure the worth of hair scissors, from their length to their steel quality to their “grind”… forget all of that terminology, except for the fact that “convex” means “high quality.” Turn to the trusted name in beard care for these Japanese-steel shears which will help tidy up strays while mitigating split ends.


Adam Hurly

Contributor

Adam is a grooming writer with a decade of experience on the beat. He also covers the travel industry. In addition to Spy, Adam has written for nearly all notable men's outlets, like GQ, Esquire…

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