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Editorial update, June 18, 2026: This beard length chart is a general grooming reference. Beard density, curl, color contrast, blade condition, and trimming direction can change how the same millimeter setting looks in real life.
Direct answer: A beard trimmer length chart maps millimeter settings to the kind of beard they usually create. In general, 0.5mm to 1mm is close stubble, 2mm to 3mm is heavy stubble, 4mm to 6mm is a short beard, 9mm to 12mm is a fuller short beard, and 16mm to 20mm is better for medium beard maintenance.
Use this page when you know the length you want but need a practical reference before choosing a trimmer setting. If you need to understand guards and comb numbers first, start with the beard trimmer guard sizes guide.
Quick beard length chart
| Length | Approx inches | Common description | Good for |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5mm | 1/50 in | Very close stubble | Sharp shadow and daily cleanup |
| 1mm | 1/25 in | Close stubble | Short clean stubble with minimal bulk |
| 2mm | 1/12 in | Light-to-medium stubble | Softer stubble coverage |
| 3mm | 1/8 in | Heavy stubble | Dense stubble or a very short beard |
| 4mm | 5/32 in | Very short beard | First beard-length setting after stubble |
| 5mm | 3/16 in | Short beard | Tidy beard maintenance |
| 6mm | 1/4 in | Short boxed beard | Even short beard with defined edges |
| 9mm | 3/8 in | Fuller short beard | More chin and cheek coverage |
| 12mm | 1/2 in | Short-to-medium beard | Fuller beard maintenance |
| 16mm | 5/8 in | Medium beard | Shape control before scissors |
| 20mm | 3/4 in | Longer medium beard | Bulk reduction and shaping |
The inch values are rounded. A manufacturer chart or printed trimmer setting should take priority when you are checking a specific tool.
What each beard length usually looks like
| Length band | Typical look | Practical notes |
|---|---|---|
| 0.5mm-1mm | Close stubble | Skin remains visible. Works best when you want a clean shadow rather than beard volume. |
| 2mm-3mm | Heavy stubble | More texture appears, and patchy areas may look softer than at 0.5mm or 1mm. |
| 4mm-6mm | Short beard | Edges, neckline, and cheek line start to matter more than the exact millimeter number. |
| 9mm-12mm | Fuller short beard | Comb before trimming so longer hairs feed evenly into the guard. |
| 16mm-20mm | Medium beard maintenance | Useful for reducing bulk, but many users still refine shape with scissors or a longer-beard trimmer. |
Which beard length should you choose?
| Situation | Suggested starting length | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Patchy cheeks | 3mm-6mm | Leaves more coverage than close stubble and can soften uneven areas. |
| Dense beard growth | 1mm-3mm | Dense hair can still look full when trimmed short. |
| First time trimming shorter | One setting above target | Reduces the risk of taking off too much at once. |
| Office-friendly short beard | 4mm-9mm | Keeps visible beard shape without looking overly long. |
| Longer beard maintenance | 12mm-20mm | Trims bulk while preserving more of the beard shape. |
Why millimeters do not always match appearance
A 3mm setting can look like neat stubble on one beard and sparse growth on another. Darker or denser facial hair usually looks fuller at the same length, while lighter, finer, or patchier hair often needs more length to look even.
Technique also changes the result. Trimming against the grain usually cuts more aggressively than trimming with the grain. A dull blade can pull or skip hair, and pressing the guard into the face can cut slightly shorter than expected.
How to test a new beard length safely
Use a gradual test when trying a shorter length or using a new trimmer for the first time.
- Choose a longer setting than your target. Start above the final length so you have room to adjust.
- Trim a small low-visibility area first. Test under the jaw or another area that is easy to blend.
- Check the result in normal light. Bathroom lighting can hide patchiness or make stubble look sharper than it is.
- Step down gradually. Move shorter one setting at a time instead of jumping from a long guard to close stubble.
- Save detail work for last. Finish the neckline, cheek line, and mustache edge after the bulk length is even.
If the tool pulls hair or leaves uneven patches, clean the blade before going shorter. The cleaning and oiling guide explains safe maintenance basics.
How length affects trimmer choice
Short-stubble users should look for small increments near 0.5mm, 1mm, and 2mm. Short-beard users need reliable guards in the 4mm to 9mm range. Longer-beard users should check whether the trimmer includes stable combs above 12mm and whether replacement guards are available.
For a broader purchase framework, use the beard trimmer buying guide. If you are deciding between grooming tools, compare a beard trimmer, hair clipper, and electric shaver.
Frequently asked questions
What beard length is best for stubble?
Most stubble styles fall between 0.5mm and 3mm. Choose 0.5mm to 1mm for close stubble, 2mm for softer coverage, and 3mm for heavy stubble that starts to look like a very short beard.
Is 3mm a beard or stubble?
Three millimeters is usually heavy stubble or the start of a very short beard. Dense dark growth may look like a short beard at 3mm, while lighter or patchier growth may still look like stubble.
What length is a short beard?
A short beard often starts around 4mm to 6mm and can extend into the 9mm to 12mm range depending on density and shape. Edge cleanup becomes more important as the beard moves past heavy stubble.
What beard length hides patchy growth?
Patchy cheeks often look better starting around 3mm to 6mm because the extra length gives sparse areas more coverage. The right length still depends on growth pattern, color contrast, and how the neckline and cheek line are shaped.
Is 10mm a long beard?
Ten millimeters is usually a fuller short beard, not a long beard. It gives more coverage than short boxed-beard lengths, but it is still short enough for many trimmers with longer guard attachments.
Should I trim shorter on my cheeks or chin?
Many beards look more balanced with slightly shorter cheeks and a little more length around the chin, but start conservatively. Step down gradually so the beard does not become uneven or too narrow.