21 Pirate Hairstyles for Women to Channel Your Inner Buccaneer
Pirate hairstyles for women keep coming back season after season because they pack personality into every braid and wrap. I wore a rope braid with gold cuffs to a themed event last fall and had people asking how I did it all night. The reaction genuinely surprised me.

These looks stretch well beyond Halloween. A bandana-wrapped half-up style works at a music festival, and box braids with brass coins read as bold everyday fashion. What they share is that lived-in, slightly rebellious texture that takes less skill than it appears.
Why Pirate Hairstyles for Women Are Trending Right Now
Search interest in pirate-inspired hair has spiked alongside the resurgence of boho and coastal aesthetics on Pinterest. Stylists like Guy Tang have leaned into nautical and treasure-hunter textures for editorial shoots, and those looks translate cleanly to real heads of hair at home.
The appeal is also practical. Pirate hair is designed to look imperfect, which means a slightly uneven braid or a flyaway strand adds to the effect rather than ruining it. If you can do a basic three-strand braid, you can pull off most of these twenty-one styles.
If you like styles that look intentionally undone, check out the beanie hairstyles guide on herstylenest.com, which covers layered techniques that translate directly into pirate looks. Those same methods for getting volume under a beanie work beautifully for rope braids and half-up styles.
1. Messy Fishtail Braid

Split hair into two equal sections and cross thin pieces from each side alternately. The key is pulling the finished braid apart horizontally to create a frayed, sea-worn texture. Kenra Platinum Silkening Mist works better than most serums here because it adds slip without weighing down the braid.
2. Bandana-Wrapped Half-Up Waves

Fold a cotton bandana into a thick band and tie it across your crown, letting the knot sit at the top. Leave the bottom half loose in soft waves. IGK Beach Club Texture Spray gives those waves exactly the gritty finish this style needs without leaving residue.
3. Rope Braid with Gold Hair Cuffs

Divide a section into two strands, twist each clockwise, then wrap them together counter-clockwise. Slide gold or brass hair cuffs along the length before finishing. BERON metal cuffs from Amazon clip on without needing thread or heat, which keeps the braid intact all day.
4. Loose Boho Curls with a Head Wrap

Curl sections with a 1.25-inch barrel using a wand like the Conair Infiniti Pro, then use your fingers instead of a brush to separate them. Tie a wide fabric head wrap around the hairline and tuck the ends underneath. Let a few curls fall over the front for depth.
5. Box Braids with Coin Accessories

Box braids carry genuine locs and braiding history that slots naturally into pirate aesthetics when you add antique coin charms. Thread them onto braid ends using a beading needle or the loop tool included in most clip-in kits. Brass and copper tones read better than silver here.
6. Dutch Braid Pirate Crown

Dutch braids sit on top of the hair rather than under it, which creates a raised, sculptural effect that reads as pirate royalty. Start two braids at the temples and wrap them around the head, pinning them together at the back with U-shaped pins for a secure hold.
7. Tousled Top Knot with Face-Framing Strands

Pull everything into a high bun, scrunch it into a messy knot, and secure with ribbon or a cloth scrunchie rather than an elastic. Leave two face-framing sections out, and braid one loosely with a thin leather cord woven through for a weathered captain effect.
8. Crimped Texture with Bandana Accent

Crimping irons are back in salons, and they create that wave-warped texture no curl or blowout can replicate. Crimp only the mid-lengths and ends on rough-dried hair, leaving the roots smooth. Tie a patterned bandana loosely around the crown as the finishing step.
9. Side Swept Messy Braid

Gather all hair to one side and braid it loosely from the nape downward. Let it rest over the shoulder, then pull the edges outward so it reads more like a tangled rope than a neat plait. This style photographs especially well from a three-quarter angle.
10. Layered Waves with Braided Sections

Leave most of your hair in natural or heat-styled waves and braid two or three scattered sections throughout. Those braids blend into the wave pattern rather than sitting on top of it. A wooden or bone-look hair pin at the back anchor point finishes the style cleanly.
11. Chunky Dreadlock-Style Twists

If you do not have natural locs, clip-in dreadlock extensions from Locs N Braids give you the texture you need. Scatter them through your natural hair, clip at the roots, and add gold or amber beads near the tips using a threading tool for an authentic finish.
12. Half-Up Twisted Knot

Take the top section, split it into two, twist each strand toward the centre, and pin where they meet. The bottom falls loose and wavy. For more ideas that work on similar lengths, the shoulder-length hairstyles guide on herstylenest.com covers comparable half-up techniques in detail.
13. Pirate Ponytail with Ribbon Wrap

Start with a low ponytail rather than a high one, which reads as more pirate than cheerleader. Wrap a 12-inch length of grosgrain ribbon around the elastic and tie it in a bow, letting the ribbon tail hang alongside the ponytail. Pull a few strands loose around the hairline.
14. Beach Wave Updo with Shell Pins

Create loose, salt-spray waves using Bumble and bumble Surf Spray, then twist the upper section loosely and pin it with shell or starfish hairpins. These are widely available on Etsy and Amazon. The result looks effortless but photographs consistently well for social media content.
15. Braided Side Bun

Braid a section at the temple downward, then gather the remaining hair and combine it with the braid into a loose low bun sitting just above the ear. Let a few strands escape from the bun. A dry texture spray helps hold it without making it stiff.
16. Asymmetric Pirate Updo

Part down the center and create a Dutch braid on each side from hairline to nape. Leave the ends loose and partially unravelled rather than securing them neatly. Adding ribbon to one side only breaks the symmetry in just the right way for a pirate-inspired finish.
17. Double Dutch Braids

Part down the center and create a Dutch braid on each side from hairline to nape. Leave the ends loose and partially unraveled rather than securing them neatly. Adding ribbon to one side only breaks the symmetry in just the right way for a pirate-inspired finish.
18. Goddess braids with shell beads

Goddess braids are wider and slightly elevated than standard cornrows, carrying real visual weight. Thread fine gold embroidery thread alongside the hair as you braid each section. If you want more ideas in this space, the birthday hairstyles for Black women article on herstylenest.com covers related styles in full.
19. Tousled Faux Mohawk

Divide the hair from front to back into three sections. Pin the outer sections up and over toward the center to create height. Apply strong-hold mousse to those pinned sections and rough-dry for texture. The front section can stay flat or carry a single wave for variety.
20. Messy Waterfall Braid

A waterfall braid runs horizontally across the head and drops sections downward as it progresses, giving it that cascading, half-finished look. It works for pirate hairstyles because dropped sections look like hair escaping a loosening updo. Kayley Melissa’s waterfall braid tutorial on YouTube gives the clearest step-by-step breakdown.
21. Low Chignon with Braided Accent

Gather hair into a low chignon at the nape and let the shape be slightly imperfect rather than smoothed. Add a single thin braid that wraps around the base and pin it. A bandana, thin leather strip, or fine chain laid across the front works as a finishing accent.
Products That Help These Styles Last
Texturizing sprays do most of the heavy lifting across these styles. Not Your Mother’s Curl Talk, IGK Beach Club Texture Spray, and Bumble and bumble Surf Spray each work differently based on hair porosity, so test which one gives you the right balance of grit and hold.
For accessories, look at Etsy sellers like The Bohemian Riser and search Amazon under “pirate hair accessories” or “Viking hair cuffs.” Brass beads, shell pins, gold rings, and leather cord are available cheaply in multipacks and look far more expensive than they cost when woven into the right braid.
Bobby pins are underrated here. Get the type that have a ridged edge rather than a smooth one, as they grip better on textured and layered pirate styles. Scunci Effortless Beauty bobby pins in bronze or gold sit almost invisibly in most braid and chignon configurations.
Common Mistakes to Skip When Styling Pirate Hair
The biggest mistake is making everything too neat. Pirate hairstyles for women are supposed to look lived in, which means pulling the braid apart, using your fingers to separate waves, and leaning into flyaways rather than spraying them down. Neat is genuinely the enemy of this aesthetic.
The second issue is overdoing the accessories. One or two gold cuffs or a single shell pin reads as editorial. Covering every section with beads, coins, shells, and pins reads as costume, which is fine for Halloween but not for everyday pirate-inspired styling. Edit before leaving the house.
Skipping the prep step is also common. Most of these styles need second-day or prepped hair to work properly. Fresh-washed hair that is too soft or slippery will not hold a rope braid or a waterfall braid for more than a few hours. Dry shampoo at the roots solves this.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the easiest pirate hairstyle for long hair?
The messy fishtail braid and the rope braid with gold cuffs are both low-skill options that look high-effort on long hair. Neither requires extensions, heat tools, or salon products. A basic fishtail on second-day hair gives the best texture naturally without added effort.
Can I wear pirate hairstyles with short hair?
Yes. The bandana-wrapped half-up style, the tousled faux mohawk, and the crimped texture with bandana accent all work on bob-length or shorter hair. A bandana does a lot of the visual work, letting shorter hair carry the pirate look without needing extra length.
What accessories do pirate hairstyles usually include?
Gold and brass hair cuffs, beaded rings, shell pins, leather cord, coin charms, and patterned bandanas are the most common. You can find multipacks of all of these on Amazon or Etsy for under fifteen dollars, and they reuse cleanly across multiple looks.
Do pirate hairstyles work on natural hair?
Box braids, goddess braids, dreadlock-inspired twists, and waterfall braids all translate directly to natural hair textures. Coin accessories and gold thread work beautifully on tighter curl patterns and 4C hair. The key is choosing styles that complement your natural texture rather than working against it.
How long do pirate hairstyles take to do at home?
Most of these twenty-one styles take between ten and thirty minutes at home. The messy fishtail braid, half-up twisted knot, and low chignon are all under fifteen minutes. The Dutch braid crown and waterfall braid take the longest but reward the investment in photos.
What hair products work best for pirate hairstyles?
Salt or sea spray texturizes waves without making them crispy. A dry texture spray like Oribe Dry Texturizing Spray adds grip to fine hair for braids. Hold without stiffness is the goal, which rules out maximum-hold gels and lacquers for most of these styles.
Are pirate hairstyles appropriate for costume parties only?
No. Bandana wraps, boho rope braids, and layered waves with braided sections all read as fashionable rather than costume when you keep accessories minimal. The full look with bandana, coin charms, and layered braids works best for themed events or music festivals.
These twenty-one pirate hairstyles for women cover everything from five-minute rope braids to full updo situations that take some planning. The common thread is texture, intentional imperfection, and accessories used sparingly. Try one at your next event and see which version of the look fits your hair and your mood.

Sarah Williams
Hi, I’m Sarah Williams — the founder of HerStyleNest, where beauty meets modern style. I share trendy hairstyles, chic nail designs, and fashion inspiration for women who love staying stylish every season. From everyday elegance to viral beauty trends, HerStyleNest is your go-to destination for effortless fashion and beauty ideas.

