Extended Goatee
A chin beard and mustache that reach partway along the jawline — more presence than a goatee, less commitment than a beard, previewed on your own face.


Real result — same face, not a stock model or a filter.
Not sure it suits your face? Check your face shape — free →
Who it suits
The extended goatee takes the classic goatee and stretches it along the lower jawline toward the ears before tapering off, with the upper cheeks clean. That extra reach traces and sharpens the jaw, which is why it's a go-to for round and soft-jawed faces — it draws a line where definition is wanted. It also suits men whose chin and jaw growth is strong but whose upper cheeks are sparse, since the style never asks the cheeks to perform. Compared to a plain goatee it reads slightly more rugged and contemporary.
What to expect in real life
The defining feature — where the beard tapers off along the jaw — is also the maintenance burden. That fade line needs deliberate trimmer work every few days, or the style drifts toward either a full beard or a chinstrap. The upper cheeks stay shaved, the mustache and chin get a weekly trim, and the jawline edge is a two-to-three-day cadence. It's a precision style: when the lines are crisp it looks sharp and intentional, and when they blur it just looks like you stopped halfway through shaving.
How this is different from a filter
A filter pastes a generic goatee shape layer over the lower half of your face — you can't see how the edges fall against your own jaw angle, how the density reads with your skin tone, or whether the shape suits your features. Stylery re-renders the facial hair itself — the taper along your actual jawline, the clean upper cheeks, the connected mustache — mapped onto your actual photo. Your face shape, skin tone and features stay untouched, so you're judging the style against your real structure, not a stock model.





