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Article: Underscarves Explained: How to Choose the Right Undercap for Your Hijab (2026 Guide)

Inner-Silk Jaida Underscarf

Underscarves Explained: How to Choose the Right Undercap for Your Hijab (2026 Guide)

The best underscarf for hijab depends on your hijab fabric. Cotton or textured jersey underscarves work best for chiffon and satin (which need grip). Fully smooth silk or satin caps protect hair but only suit textured fabrics like modal or jersey. A dual-layer undercap—silk-touch inside for hair protection, grippy cotton outside—works with every fabric, including chiffon and satin. For everyday versatility, a cotton or dual-layer bonnet-style underscarf is the safest choice. The underscarf is the foundation that makes your hijab stay in place.

That's the quick answer. But if you've ever wondered why your hijab keeps slipping despite using pins—or which underscarf type actually works best for your hair and fabric—this guide covers everything you need to know about the most important hijab accessory most women overlook.

What is an Underscarf (And Why Do You Need One)?

An underscarf—also called an undercap, bonnet, or inner—is a fitted cap worn beneath your hijab. It might seem like an optional extra, but it's actually the foundation that makes everything else work.

The 4 Jobs of an Underscarf

1. Keeps your hair secured

Your underscarf contains your hair so it doesn't peek out, shift around, or create bumps under your hijab. This gives you a smooth, polished base to work with.

2. Gives your hijab something to grip

This is the big one. Smooth hijab fabrics (especially chiffon and satin) will slide right off smooth hair. An underscarf provides friction—something for the hijab fabric to hold onto. Without it, you're fighting a losing battle against slipping.

3. Creates a smooth base for styling

Underscarves smooth out hair texture and volume, creating a clean silhouette. Your hijab drapes better over a smooth foundation than over bumpy, uneven hair.

4. Adds coverage under sheer fabrics

Lightweight fabrics like chiffon can be semi-sheer. An underscarf in a matching or neutral color provides an extra layer of coverage so your hair color doesn't show through.

Do You Really Need an Underscarf?

For most hijab styles and fabrics: yes.

If you wear chiffon, satin, or silk hijabs, an underscarf is essentially mandatory. These fabrics are too slippery to stay in place without something to grip onto.

If you wear modal or jersey hijabs, you might get away without one on casual days—but you'll still get a more polished, secure look with an underscarf.

When You Might Skip an Underscarf

  • Very thick jersey hijabs that grip hair naturally
  • Casual at-home styling where perfection doesn't matter
  • Quick errands with non-slip fabrics
  • Turban styles that wrap tightly enough to self-secure

But even in these cases, most women find an underscarf makes styling faster and easier.

Types of Underscarves Explained

Not all underscarves are the same. Here's what each type does and who it's best for.

The Bonnet (Full Coverage Cap)

What it is: A fitted cap that covers your entire head and contains all your hair. Usually has an elastic edge or tie-back closure.

Pros:

  • Maximum coverage—all hair is secured
  • Stays in place reliably
  • Works for all hair lengths and thicknesses
  • Best grip for slippery hijab fabrics
  • Most versatile option overall

Cons:

  • Can feel warm in hot weather
  • More fabric on your head
  • May show under very sheer hijabs if color doesn't match

Best for: Most women, especially those with thick hair, anyone wearing chiffon or satin, and beginners who want reliable coverage.

The Tube Underscarf (Versatile Band)

What it is: A stretchy tube of fabric that you pull over your head like a headband. Covers your hairline but leaves the crown more open.

Pros:

  • Quick to put on
  • Less fabric, cooler in summer
  • Works for minimal hijab styles
  • Easy to adjust placement

Cons:

  • Less coverage than bonnet
  • May not contain very thick or long hair
  • Can slip backward on some head shapes

Best for: Women with shorter or thinner hair, minimal styling, hot weather, quick everyday looks.

The Tie-Back Underscarf

What it is: A bonnet-style cap with ties or adjustable straps at the back instead of elastic.

Pros:

  • Adjustable fit for any head size
  • Secure closure that won't loosen
  • Good for active wear
  • Can adjust tightness throughout the day

Cons:

  • Ties can create bumps under hijab if not flat
  • Takes slightly longer to put on

Best for: Women who struggle with elastic fit, active lifestyles, those who need adjustability, anyone between standard sizes.

The Ninja Underscarf (Full Neck Coverage)

What it is: An underscarf that extends to cover your neck and sometimes shoulders, like a balaclava-style coverage.

Pros:

  • Maximum coverage including neck
  • Great for sports and active wear
  • No gaps between hijab and clothing
  • Excellent for cold weather

Cons:

  • Can be hot in warm weather
  • More fabric to manage
  • May feel restrictive for some

Best for: Sports and exercise, cold climates, maximum coverage needs, outdoor activities.

Underscarf Type Comparison

Type Coverage Best For Weather
Bonnet Full head Most women, everyday wear All seasons
Tube Hairline/partial Minimal styles, quick wear Hot weather
Tie-Back Full head Adjustable fit, active wear All seasons
Ninja Head + neck Sports, maximum coverage Cold weather

Underscarf Materials: Which Fabric is Best?

The material of your underscarf matters just as much as the style—especially for keeping your hijab in place and protecting your hair.

Cotton Underscarves

Characteristics:

  • Natural fiber, breathable
  • Matte, textured surface
  • Absorbs moisture
  • Provides excellent grip

Pros:

  • Best grip for slippery hijab fabrics
  • Breathable in hot weather
  • Gentle on skin
  • Easy to wash
  • Affordable

Cons:

  • Can cause friction on hair over time
  • May not be the softest option
  • Can wrinkle

Best paired with: Chiffon hijabs, satin hijabs, any slippery fabric

Jersey Underscarves

Characteristics:

  • Stretchy knit fabric
  • Soft and flexible
  • Fitted feel
  • Moderate texture

Pros:

  • Comfortable stretch fit
  • Soft against skin
  • Stays in place well
  • Good all-around choice

Cons:

  • Some jerseys are too slick—look for textured jersey
  • Can be warm in summer
  • Quality varies widely

Best paired with: All hijab fabrics—good all-rounder

Silk-Lined Underscarves

Characteristics:

  • Two constructions exist: fully smooth silk/satin caps, and dual-layer designs (silk-touch interior, cotton exterior)
  • Smooth against hair
  • Designed for hair protection

Pros:

  • Protects hair and edges from breakage and friction
  • Reduces frizz
  • Great for natural or textured hair
  • Helps hair retain moisture

Cons:

  • Fully smooth silk/satin caps give your hijab nothing to grip
  • Quality varies—always check what the outer layer is made of
  • More expensive

Best paired with: Dual-layer versions work with every fabric, including chiffon and satin. Fully smooth caps should stay with modal and jersey only.

Important—not all silk-lined underscarves are the same. A fully smooth silk or satin cap will cause chiffon and satin hijabs to slip: smooth on smooth has nothing to hold onto. But a dual-layer design solves this—silk-touch fabric on the inside, where it meets your hair and edges, and grippy cotton on the outside, where your hijab needs friction. That construction gives you hair protection and hijab security at the same time. It's exactly why we designed our Inner Silk Undercap this way: kind to your edges on the inside, non-slip on the outside.

Inner Silk Undercap — JAIDA

From the JAIDA Collection

Inner Silk Undercap

Silk-touch inside to protect your hair and edges. Grippy cotton outside so your chiffon stays put. The dual-layer undercap this guide keeps coming back to.

See the Inner Silk Undercap →

Bamboo/Modal Underscarves

Characteristics:

  • Made from bamboo or modal fibers
  • Exceptionally soft
  • Temperature regulating
  • Naturally antibacterial

Pros:

  • Ultra-soft on skin and hair
  • Breathable in all weather
  • Gentle for sensitive skin
  • Eco-friendly option

Cons:

  • Can be pricier
  • May not provide as much grip as cotton

Best paired with: All fabrics, especially good for sensitive skin

Material Comparison Table

Material Grip Level Breathability Hair Protection Best With
Cotton High High Moderate Chiffon, satin
Jersey Medium-High Medium Moderate All fabrics
Silk-Lined (fully smooth) Low Medium Excellent Modal, jersey hijabs
Dual-Layer (silk inside, cotton out) High Medium-High Excellent All fabrics, including chiffon & satin
Bamboo/Modal Medium High Good All fabrics, sensitive skin

How to Choose an Underscarf for Your Hijab Fabric

This is the key section: matching your underscarf to your hijab fabric for optimal results.

Best Underscarf for Chiffon Hijab

Recommended: Cotton or textured jersey underscarf—or a dual-layer undercap (silk-touch inside, cotton outside) if you also want hair protection

Why: Chiffon is lightweight and slippery. It needs a textured surface underneath to grip onto. Cotton provides maximum friction; a dual-layer undercap gives you that same cotton grip on the outside while protecting your hair on the inside.

Avoid: Fully smooth silk or satin caps. Smooth cap + smooth chiffon = constant slipping. (Dual-layer undercaps are the exception—their cotton exterior gives chiffon the grip it needs.)

Pro tip: Make sure your underscarf covers your hairline completely. Chiffon will slide backward if there's bare hair at the front.

Best Underscarf for Satin Hijab

Recommended: Cotton underscarf with maximum texture, or a dual-layer undercap with a grippy cotton exterior

Why: Satin is the slipperiest hijab fabric. It needs all the grip it can get. What matters is the outside of your underscarf—that's the surface your satin holds onto.

Avoid: Fully smooth silk or satin caps—absolutely not with satin. Smooth on smooth is a recipe for constant adjusting. If you want hair protection under satin, choose a dual-layer undercap with a cotton exterior instead.

Pro tip: With satin, also use the tuck method (tuck front hijab edge under your underscarf) for extra security.

Best Underscarf for Modal Hijab

Recommended: Any underscarf works, including fully smooth silk-lined

Why: Modal is naturally non-slip with a soft texture. It doesn't require extra grip from your underscarf, giving you freedom to prioritize hair protection.

Best choice: Silk-lined or dual-layer if you want hair protection, or bamboo for comfort. Cotton works too if that's what you have.

Pro tip: Modal is the most forgiving fabric—perfect for days when you're using a silk-lined underscarf for hair health.

Best Underscarf for Jersey Hijab

Recommended: Minimal underscarf or silk-lined

Why: Jersey hijabs are stretchy and naturally grippy. They often stay in place even on smoother underscarves, making this a good opportunity to use silk-lined for hair protection.

Option: Some women skip underscarves entirely with thick jersey hijabs. If you do, just make sure your hair is secured another way.

Fabric + Underscarf Pairing Chart

Hijab Fabric Best Underscarf Can Use Avoid
Chiffon Cotton, dual-layer undercap Textured jersey, bamboo Fully smooth satin caps
Satin Cotton, dual-layer undercap Textured jersey Fully smooth satin caps
Modal Any—silk-lined works great All options None
Jersey Silk-lined, minimal All options None
Silk Cotton, dual-layer undercap Anything smooth on the outside

How to Choose an Underscarf for Your Hair Type

Your hair type also affects which underscarf works best.

Thick or Voluminous Hair

Challenge: Containing all the hair, preventing bulk

Best choice: Bonnet-style with full coverage. Tube underscarves often can't contain thick hair and will slide backward.

Tips:

  • Look for underscarves with adjustable ties for custom fit
  • Consider underscarves designed for "high volume"
  • A low bun or braid can help reduce bulk
  • Elastic edges should be snug but not tight

Fine or Thin Hair

Challenge: Underscarf sliding, lack of friction

Best choice: Fitted bonnet or tube that stays snug. The key is a secure fit since thin hair doesn't create natural friction.

Tips:

  • Textured cotton underscarves provide extra grip
  • Avoid oversized underscarves that will shift
  • A lightweight scrunchie at the crown can add anchor points

Natural or Textured Hair

Challenge: Hair health, moisture retention, breakage prevention

Best choice: Silk-touch interiors are ideal for natural hair. They reduce friction that causes breakage and help retain moisture.

Tips:

  • Pair fully smooth silk-lined underscarves with modal hijabs (which don't need grip)
  • When wearing chiffon or satin, choose a dual-layer undercap (silk-touch inside, cotton outside) so you don't have to trade hair protection for grip
  • Look for underscarves with extra room for volume
  • Satin bonnets at night + a dual-layer undercap for hijab is a good combo

Hair Loss or Sensitivity Considerations

Challenge: Comfort, gentle materials, secure fit without pressure

Best choice: Bamboo or silk-lined underscarves—the softest options against sensitive scalps.

Tips:

  • Avoid elastic that's too tight
  • Tie-back styles let you control pressure
  • Natural fibers (bamboo, cotton) are gentler than synthetics
  • Some women prefer volumizing underscarves to create shape without relying on hair

How to Wear an Underscarf Correctly

Even the best underscarf won't work if worn incorrectly. Here's how to get it right.

Step-by-Step: Bonnet Style

  1. Prep your hair: Brush or smooth your hair back
  2. Gather at nape: Pull hair into a low bun, braid, or simply gather at the back of your neck
  3. Position the bonnet: Place the front edge at your hairline (not behind it)
  4. Pull back: Stretch the bonnet over your head, tucking all hair inside
  5. Adjust the front: Make sure no hair peeks out at the hairline
  6. Smooth the sides: Check that ears are covered or positioned as you prefer
  7. Check the fit: It should be snug but not giving you a headache

Step-by-Step: Tube Style

  1. Gather your hair: Secure at the back however you prefer
  2. Stretch the tube: Hold it open with both hands
  3. Pull over head: Like putting on a headband
  4. Position at hairline: Front edge should sit right at your hairline
  5. Adjust the back: Make sure it covers where you need it
  6. Check security: Shake your head—it shouldn't move much

Common Mistakes That Cause Slipping

Mistake 1: Underscarf sits behind hairline

If your underscarf starts behind your hairline, your hijab has nothing to grip at the front. It will slide backward throughout the day.

Fix: Pull the underscarf forward so it sits right at your hairline.

Mistake 2: Underscarf is too loose

A loose underscarf shifts around, taking your hijab with it.

Fix: Choose a snugger fit, or use a tie-back style for adjustability.

Mistake 3: Using the wrong material for your hijab fabric

Fully smooth satin caps with chiffon or satin hijabs = slipping disaster.

Fix: Match your underscarf to your hijab fabric using the chart above—what matters is the outside surface of the cap.

Mistake 4: Hair bulk creating bumps

If you haven't secured your hair flat, it creates bumps that make the hijab sit unevenly and shift.

Fix: Gather hair in a low, flat style before putting on your underscarf.

How to Stop Your Underscarf from Showing

Sometimes underscarves peek out where you don't want them. Here's how to fix that.

Color Matching

The easiest solution: match your underscarf color to your hijab or skin tone.

  • Match to hijab: Black underscarf with black hijab, cream with cream, etc.
  • Match to skin: Nude/beige underscarves blend with your skin if they peek out
  • Universal neutrals: Black and nude work with almost everything

Positioning Tips

  • Pull the underscarf slightly back from your hairline (about 1cm)
  • Make sure the hijab comes forward enough to cover the underscarf edge
  • Adjust after pinning if underscarf shows at sides

For Very Sheer Hijabs

Light-colored or sheer chiffons will show your underscarf and hair color through the fabric.

  • Use an underscarf that matches your hijab color
  • Or use a neutral that coordinates (grey underscarf with light blue hijab, for example)
  • Some women use a double layer: nude underscarf + colored inner layer

How Many Underscarves Do You Need?

Minimum: 2 underscarves

  • One black (matches most hijabs)
  • One nude/skin-tone (blends when visible)

Comfortable rotation: 4-5 underscarves

  • 2 black
  • 1 white/cream
  • 1 nude
  • 1 color that matches your most-worn hijabs

Why multiples:

  • Underscarves should be washed after every wear (they absorb oil and sweat)
  • Having backups means you always have a clean one ready
  • Different styles for different needs (cotton or dual-layer for chiffon days, smooth silk-lined for modal days)

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need an underscarf for hijab?

For most hijab styles and fabrics, yes. An underscarf provides grip for the hijab to hold onto, keeps hair secured, creates a smooth base for draping, and adds coverage under sheer fabrics. Some thick jersey hijabs can be worn without underscarves, but chiffon and satin almost always require one.

What is the difference between an underscarf and an undercap?

They're the same thing—different names for the cap worn beneath a hijab. "Underscarf" is more common in some regions, while "undercap" or "bonnet" is used in others. All refer to the foundation piece that goes under your hijab.

What is the best underscarf for chiffon hijab?

A cotton or textured jersey underscarf works best with chiffon, because the texture gives the smooth fabric something to grip. If you also want hair protection, choose a dual-layer undercap with a silk-touch interior and a cotton exterior—the cotton outside grips your chiffon while the silk-touch inside protects your hair. Only avoid fully smooth silk or satin caps, which cause slipping.

What is the best underscarf for satin hijab?

Use a cotton underscarf with maximum texture, or a dual-layer undercap with a grippy cotton exterior. Satin is the slipperiest hijab fabric and needs all the grip it can get. Never use a fully smooth silk or satin cap with satin—the smoothness will cause constant sliding.

Do silk-lined underscarves cause hijab to slip?

Only if the cap is smooth on the outside. It's the exterior of the underscarf that your hijab grips, not the interior. A fully smooth silk or satin cap will cause chiffon and satin to slip. A dual-layer undercap—silk-touch inside for your hair, cotton outside for grip—holds slippery fabrics securely while still protecting your hair.

What type of undercap is best for thick hair?

A bonnet-style undercap with full coverage contains thick hair best. Look for underscarves with adjustable back ties or elastic for a secure fit. Avoid tube styles if you have very thick hair—they may not provide enough coverage or hold.

How do I stop my underscarf from showing?

Choose an underscarf color that matches your hijab or skin tone. Pull the underscarf back slightly from your hairline—about 1cm—before placing your hijab. For very sheer fabrics, a matching underscarf is essential.

Are cotton or jersey underscarves better?

Cotton is more breathable and textured (better for grip and hot weather). Jersey is more stretchy and fitted (better for secure coverage and active movement). Both work well—choose based on your climate, hair type, and hijab fabric.

How often should I wash my underscarf?

Wash underscarves after every wear. They sit directly against your scalp and absorb oils, sweat, and product residue. Regular washing keeps your scalp healthy and extends the life of your underscarves.

Can I wear hijab without an underscarf?

It depends on the hijab fabric. Thick jersey hijabs can sometimes work without an underscarf since they're naturally grippy. Modal hijabs are forgiving. But chiffon, satin, and silk hijabs will slip constantly without an underscarf—it's not worth the frustration.

Your Underscarf Checklist

Essential starter kit:

  • ✅ 1 cotton or dual-layer bonnet (for chiffon and satin hijabs)
  • ✅ 1 black underscarf (matches everything)
  • ✅ 1 nude underscarf (blends when visible)

Expanded collection:

  • ✅ Cotton or textured jersey for slippery hijab days
  • ✅ Dual-layer undercap (silk-touch inside, cotton out) for hair protection with any fabric
  • ✅ Tube style for quick, minimal looks
  • ✅ Tie-back for adjustable fit
  • ✅ White/cream for light-colored hijabs

Remember:

  • Match your underscarf to your hijab fabric—what matters is the cap's outside surface
  • Wash after every wear
  • Position at your hairline, not behind it
  • Snug fit, but not headache-tight

The Foundation of Great Hijab Styling

Your underscarf might be invisible, but it's doing the most important work. The right underscarf means your hijab stays in place, your hair stays protected, and your styling stays effortless.

Think of it this way: a beautiful hijab on the wrong underscarf is like a gorgeous dress with the wrong undergarments. The foundation matters.

Get your underscarf right, and everything else becomes easier.

Shop Underscarves →

Questions about which underscarf is right for you? DM us @myjaida — we're always happy to help. 🤍

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