Let me be honest about wine red before you fall for it: it is among the most beautiful colors you can wear, and one of the fastest to fade. Red dye molecules are large and sit closer to the surface of the hair, so they wash away faster than any other shade. Wine red is as much a maintenance commitment as it is a color choice, and knowing that up front is half the battle.
The good news is that the payoff is worth it, and there is a wine red for everyone. These twenty shades run from deep burgundy and merlot to bright cherry and soft rosé, and for each one I have noted the skin tones it flatters and how it is achieved. Then we get into the care that keeps all that depth from dulling within a month.
What Wine Red Really Is
Wine red is the whole family of deep, blue-and-purple-leaning reds, from burgundy and merlot to plum, cherry, and cabernet. What unites them is richness and depth rather than the bright, orange-leaning warmth of a true copper. It looks sophisticated and a little moody, which is exactly the appeal, and it shows beautifully on a wide range of hair, including naturally dark hair that needs little or no lifting for the deeper shades.
The one thing to know before you commit: red is the fastest-fading color there is, so wine red is as much about upkeep as about the shade. Wash cool and less often, use color-safe and color-depositing products, and refresh with a gloss, and the depth that drew you in will actually last.
Classic Wine Red

The classic wine red is where most people start: a deep, true red with just enough blue undertone to keep it from veering orange. It is rich, bold, and timeless, the shade that looks expensive and intentional. It is the wine red I guide most first-timers to, because it flatters widely and asks slightly less of you than the brights. This is the benchmark all the other wine tones play off of.
Who classic wine red flatters
It flatters cool and neutral skin tones especially, where the blue undertone harmonizes with the complexion. On naturally dark hair it can often be achieved with little or no lifting, while lighter hair takes it readily. This is the most versatile wine red and the easiest to ask for by name.
Worn all over, it looks polished and confident. Soft waves show off its depth best, since the movement lets the light reveal the dimension within the color.
Bordeaux Highlights

If all-over color feels like too much, bordeaux highlights are the gentle way in. Deep, wine-toned highlights woven through a darker base add dimension and a hint of richness without committing your whole head to red. It is subtle, sophisticated, and far lower-maintenance than an all-over wine.
Because the highlights sit against a base, the grow-out is forgiving and the upkeep is easier than a solid color. It is a beautiful choice for brunettes who want a touch of wine without the full commitment. See our winter hair color ideas for brunettes for more.
- Wine-toned highlights add dimension without all-over color.
- Lower upkeep and a more forgiving grow-out than solid wine.
- A great first step for brunettes testing the wine family.
Heads-Up
Red is the fastest-fading hair color there is. The dye molecules are large and sit closer to the surface, so wine red washes out faster than any other shade. Go in expecting a gloss refresh every few weeks and a strict color-safe routine, or your rich wine will dull within a month.
Deep Merlot

Merlot is wine red at its richest and darkest, a deep, brooding red-brown that looks almost black until the light hits it and reveals the wine within. It is moody, elegant, and among the most wearable wine shades, since the depth keeps it sophisticated and grounded.
Deep merlot is a wonderful choice for anyone who wants a subtle, grown-up red, and it is especially flattering on darker hair, where it often needs little lifting to show its tone. The darkness also means it fades more gracefully than a bright wine, since there is more depth to lose before it looks dull.
Cherry Wine Balayage

Brighter and juicier than merlot, cherry wine has a vivid, almost luminous quality, and painted on as a balayage it creates soft, dimensional movement. The hand-painted technique blends the cherry tone through the lengths for a sun-catching, grown-out-friendly finish. It is playful and rich at once. Here is how it comes together.
- Hand-painted balayage blends cherry wine softly through the lengths.
- The brighter tone catches light and looks vivid and juicy.
- Balayage placement keeps the grow-out soft and low-maintenance.
How wine red is achieved, in broad strokes:
1Assess your starting level
Your colorist checks how dark your hair is; the deeper wine shades often need little lifting, while bright wines on dark hair may need some.
2Lift if needed, then deposit
If brightness is the goal, the hair is lightened first, then the wine tone is deposited evenly through the lengths.
3Gloss and seal
A glossing treatment seals in shine and evens the tone, and sets you up for the at-home care that keeps it from fading.
Plum Wine Ombre

Plum wine pushes the purple undertone forward, giving the red a cool, jewel-toned richness. Worn as an ombre, it fades from a darker root into brighter plum-wine ends, creating a striking gradient that is bold without being uniform. It is modern, a little edgy, and unmistakably eye-catching.
Why an ombre eases the upkeep
The ombre placement means the color concentrates where it shows most, at the ends, so the upkeep is gentler than an all-over plum. The cool purple undertone flatters fair, cool, and olive skin tones beautifully, reading rich against the complexion.
Plum is one of the more fashion-forward wine shades, so it suits someone who wants their color noticed. Loose waves show the gradient at its best.
Burgundy Ends

Dipping just the ends in burgundy is a low-commitment, high-impact way to wear wine red. The deep burgundy concentrates on the lower lengths and ends, leaving your natural color up top, so you get a pop of richness with none of the root upkeep. It is youthful, modern, and easy to grow out or trim away if you change your mind.
- Burgundy on just the ends gives color with no root maintenance.
- Easy to grow out or trim off, so it is low-risk to try.
- A great way to test wine red before going all-in.
📋Wine red is a good fit if
- ✓You are willing to wash less often and use color-safe products.
- ✓You can refresh with a gloss every few weeks to fight fading.
- ✓You want a rich, sophisticated color rather than a bright, brassy one.
Mahogany Wine Blend

Mahogany blends wine red with warm brown for a softer, more natural-looking version of the shade. The brown grounds the red, so it looks rich and warm, making it among the most flattering, wearable wine tones for everyday life. I send a lot of nervous first-timers home with mahogany, since it disguises fading and grows out kindly. It looks like a deep, expensive brunette caught in good light.
This blend is especially flattering on warm and neutral skin tones, where the brown-red warmth complements the complexion. It is also one of the easiest wine shades to maintain, since the brown base disguises fading better than a pure red. A wonderful pick for a first-timer who wants subtle richness.
- Warm brown grounds the red for a soft, natural finish.
- Flatters warm and neutral skin tones beautifully.
- Fades more gracefully than a pure wine red.
Red Wine Ombre

A red wine ombre fades from a deeper root into bright, true red-wine ends, capturing the color of a glass of red held up to the light. The gradient is bolder and warmer than a plum ombre, all rich, glowing red through the lengths. It is dramatic and full of dimension.
Like any ombre, the placement keeps the upkeep on the ends, which softens the maintenance. The warm red tone flatters neutral and warm skin, glowing against the complexion. Wear it with waves to let the gradient shine. Browse our blonde balayage color ideas for more painting techniques.
- Fades from a deep root into bright red-wine ends.
- Warmer and bolder than a plum ombre.
- Ombre placement keeps the root upkeep low.
Warm or cool? Your undertone points the way.
🎯Cool or fair skin
Lean into the blue-and-purple wines: plum, mulberry, classic wine red, and cool burgundy flatter you most.
🎯Warm or neutral skin
Lean into the warmer wines: mahogany, marsala, garnet, and zinfandel glow against your complexion.
Sangria Streaks

Sangria streaks are playful, mixing bright red-wine pieces with hints of warmth for a fruity, multi-tonal effect, like the color of a glass of sangria. Bold streaks of wine red are placed through the hair for a fun, dimensional, slightly unexpected finish. It is the most lighthearted way to wear the wine family. Here is how to place them.
- Bright wine streaks add a fun, fruity, multi-tonal effect.
- Place them face-framing or scattered for different looks.
- A playful, lower-commitment alternative to all-over color.
Cranberry Wine Waves

Cranberry sits between cherry and burgundy, a bright, slightly tart red with real vibrancy, and it comes alive in waves. The movement of waved hair lets the cranberry tone catch the light and shift between brighter and deeper, showing off its dimension. It is fresh, bold, and full of energy.
Why brighter wines need stricter care
This is a brighter wine shade, so it suits someone who wants their color to be seen, and it flatters cool and neutral skin especially. Because it is on the brighter end, it will fade faster than the deep shades, so the color-safe routine matters even more here.
Style it in soft, loose waves, since pin-straight hair flattens the dimension. The waves are what make cranberry sing.
Cabernet Curls

Cabernet is a deep, refined wine red, and on curls it is spectacular, the coils and waves catching the light to reveal every facet of the rich tone. Curly and coily hair shows off wine red beautifully, since the texture creates natural dimension that flat hair cannot. The depth of cabernet against defined curls looks luxurious. Here is how to keep it rich.
- Curls and coils show off wine red’s dimension beautifully.
- Use color-safe, hydrating products, since color and curls both want moisture.
- Refresh with a color-depositing conditioner to keep the tone deep.
Port Undertones

Port undertones add a deep, vintage richness to dark hair, a barely-there wine glow that reveals itself only in the light. Port works as a subtle undertone woven into a dark base, so your hair looks near-black until the sun catches the wine within. It is the most understated wine effect there is.
This is the perfect choice for anyone who wants the depth of wine red without an obvious commitment, and it is especially beautiful on naturally dark hair, where it often needs no lifting at all. It also fades gently, since the effect is subtle to begin with, making it among the lowest-maintenance ways to wear wine.
Scarlet Wine Lowlights

Scarlet wine lowlights weave deep, bright-red pieces underneath the surface, adding hidden pops of color that flash as you move. Where highlights lighten, these lowlights add darker, richer wine tones for depth and a peekaboo effect. It is a subtle, dimensional way to bring wine into darker hair.
Because the lowlights sit lower in the hair, they show selectively, giving you color that surprises more than it dominates. It is a flattering, low-key option that adds richness and movement to a brunette base without a dramatic change. The hidden placement also keeps the upkeep gentle.
- Hidden wine lowlights flash color as you move.
- Adds depth and a peekaboo effect to darker hair.
- Lower-key and lower-upkeep than all-over wine.
Garnet Wine Layers

Garnet is a deep, jewel-like red with a touch of brown warmth, and worn on layered hair it builds rich dimension. The layers let the garnet tone shift between depths as the hair moves, so the color looks faceted and rich, like the gemstone it is named for. It is elegant, warm, and beautifully dimensional on a layered cut.
- Garnet’s jewel-toned depth shines on layered, moving hair.
- A touch of brown warmth keeps it flattering and wearable.
- Layers let the color shift between depths as you move.
Mulberry Wine Accents

Mulberry is a cool, purple-leaning wine red, and used as face-framing accents it brightens the complexion and adds a modern pop. Placed around the face, the cool mulberry tone catches the light right where it flatters, lifting and framing your features. It is a fashion-forward, low-commitment way to wear a cooler wine.
- Cool, purple-leaning mulberry brightens the face.
- Face-framing placement flatters and adds a modern pop.
- Flatters cool and fair skin tones especially well.
Zinfandel Red

Zinfandel is a bold, vivid wine red with warmth and energy, brighter and more spirited than the deep shades. It is a confident, attention-catching color for someone who wants their wine red to be unmistakable. The warmth keeps it from feeling cold, glowing against the skin.
What zinfandel asks in upkeep
Because it is a brighter, warmer red, zinfandel flatters warm and neutral skin tones, and it makes a real statement. The trade is upkeep: like all the brighter wines, it fades faster, so a strict color-safe routine and regular glosses are essential to keep it vivid.
Worn flowing and full, with movement, zinfandel reads rich and alive. It is the wine red for a bold personality who does not mind the maintenance.
Rose Wine Highlights

Rosé wine highlights are the softest, prettiest end of the wine family, a delicate, pinkish-red that adds a romantic glow. Woven as highlights through a lighter base, the soft rosé tone catches the light for a gentle, blush-toned dimension. It is feminine, modern, and far subtler than the deep wines.
Why rose wine needs a lighter base
This shade shows best on lighter or pre-lightened hair, since the soft rosé needs a paler canvas to read true. It flatters fair and cool skin beautifully, echoing a natural flush. Like all pastel-leaning tones, it fades quickly, so expect to refresh it often to keep the blush alive.
It is a beautiful warm-weather or romantic choice, the lightest way to wear wine. Soft waves show off the delicate dimension best.
Velvet Wine Dimension

Velvet wine combines deep and bright wine tones for a plush, multi-dimensional finish that looks as rich as its name suggests. By layering a darker wine base with brighter wine highlights and lowlights, a colorist builds a deep, velvety effect with real depth and movement. It is the most luxurious-looking way to wear the color.
This is a more involved, custom color, so it belongs in skilled hands and is worth the investment. The dimension makes it incredibly flattering, since the variation catches light from every angle, and it disguises fading better than a flat color. Wear it with waves to show off the full velvety depth.
- Layered dark and bright wine tones build a plush, dimensional finish.
- The variation flatters and disguises fading better than flat color.
- A custom color worth booking a skilled colorist for.
Marsala Melt

Marsala is a warm, brownish wine red, and styled as a color melt it blends smoothly from a darker root into warmer marsala lengths with no harsh line. The melt technique creates a smooth, gradual transition, so the color looks soft and grown-out-friendly. It is warm, earthy, and beautifully wearable.
Marsala’s brown warmth makes it among the most flattering, forgiving wine shades, suiting warm and neutral skin and fading gently. The melt placement keeps the roots low-maintenance. It is a sophisticated, autumnal take on wine red that works year-round.
- A smooth color melt blends root to warm marsala lengths.
- Warm and earthy, flattering on warm and neutral skin.
- The melt and brown base both keep upkeep gentle.
Barolo Wine Gloss

A barolo gloss is the finishing touch that takes any wine red from good to glowing, a sheer, glossy layer of deep wine tone that adds shine and refreshes the color. Named for a rich Italian red, this glossy treatment deepens and revives wine hair between full colors. It is the secret weapon of every wine redhead. Here is what it does.
- A wine-toned gloss adds shine and refreshes faded color.
- Use it every few weeks to keep wine red deep and glowing.
- Available in salon or in tinted at-home formulas for upkeep.
Maintenance & Care
Here is the part that determines whether your wine red stays beautiful or dulls to a muddy brown within weeks, so read it twice. Red fades faster than any color because the dye molecules are large and sit closer to the surface, washing out a little with every shampoo. The single most important habit is to wash less often and in cool water, since heat opens the cuticle and lets the color escape.
I tell every wine-red client the same thing: every hot wash is money down the drain. Always use a sulfate-free, color-safe shampoo and conditioner, and add a color-depositing conditioner in a red or burgundy tone once or twice a week to top the color back up between salon visits.
Beyond washing, protect your wine red from the things that strip it: sun, chlorine, and high heat. Wear a hat or a UV-protective spray on long sunny days, rinse after swimming, and always use a heat protectant before styling.
Stretch your time between full colors with a gloss every few weeks rather than re-coloring constantly, which is gentler on your hair and your wallet. Treated this way, even a bright wine holds its richness; ignored, even the deepest merlot goes flat. The color is only half the commitment, and the care is the other half.
Wine Red Hair Questions, Answered
?Why does wine red fade so fast?
Red dye molecules are the largest of any color and sit closer to the surface of the hair, so they wash out faster than browns or blondes. This is true of all reds, wine included. Cool washes, sulfate-free products, and a color-depositing conditioner are what slow it down.
?Can I get wine red on dark hair without bleaching?
Often, yes, for the deeper shades. Merlot, mahogany, garnet, and port undertones can show beautifully on naturally dark hair with little or no lifting. Brighter wines like cherry, cranberry, or rosé usually need some lightening first to read true.
?Which wine red suits my skin tone?
Cool and fair skin glows with blue-purple wines like plum, mulberry, and classic wine red. Warm and neutral skin suits the warmer wines, mahogany, marsala, garnet, and zinfandel. When in doubt, a colorist can place the most flattering tones around your face.
?How do I keep wine red from going brassy or dull?
Use a color-depositing conditioner in a red or burgundy tone once or twice a week, wash cool and less often, and refresh with a gloss every few weeks. Protect it from sun, chlorine, and high heat, all of which strip and dull the color.
Deep, Refined, and Worth the Care
Wine red is among the most rewarding colors you can wear, the kind that makes people ask who does your hair. But it gives back exactly what you put in: commit to the cool washes, the color-safe products, and the regular glosses, and it stays deep and luxurious for months. Skip them, and it fades to a flat, sad brown faster than you would believe.
So which wine called to you, the brooding merlot, the bright cherry, the soft rosé? Whichever it is, choose your shade for your skin tone, find a colorist who knows reds, and go in ready for the upkeep. Do that, and wine red will be the most beautiful, most complimented color you have ever worn. See more shades in our winter blonde hair and brunette bob guides.







