In 2025, over 62% of adults aged 65 and older report keeping the same classic hairstyle they’ve worn for decades, according to the latest demographic data from the Pew Research Center.
Hairstyles often serve as powerful markers of generational identity, echoing the fashion cues, values, and norms of the past.
While youth culture continually reinvents trends, older generations sometimes hold onto familiar hairdos as a form of cultural memory and comfort.
This slow adaptation to change ensures that some once-popular hairstyles remain alive—distinctly marking the line between modernity and nostalgia.
Health
13. The Poodle Cut The poodle cut is a highly curled, rounded hairstyle that found its heyday in the 1950s. Named for its resemblance to the…