"I've gone through four nose trimmers in five years. This is the first that doesn't yank a hair every few passes. Quiet, fast, easy to rinse."

What To Know Before You Buy.
The questions we hear most often.
Does it pull hair?
No. The 360° rotary cutting head is built specifically to prevent pulling — hair feeds in from any angle and gets cut, not grabbed. If a single hair pulls, it's defective; send it back and we'll replace it.
Does it work on ear hair too?
Yes. Same blade, same head, same mechanism. Most guys buy it for the nose and realize by month two that it's the only thing they own that handles ear hair without yanking it out at the root.
How's it different from a $15 drugstore trimmer?
The cutting mechanism. Cheap trimmers use a single fixed gap with a vibrating blade — that's why they pull and sound like a power tool. The 360° rotor constantly rotates the cutting opening so hair can't snag against the gap edge. That's what costs more, and it's the only difference that actually matters.
Is it loud?
Quiet. A low-vibration motor — closer to an electric toothbrush than a power tool. You're holding it by your ear canal in the morning while your wife sleeps. That mattered to us.
What about battery and charging?
USB-C, a full charge in 90 minutes, and 60+ minutes of trim time per charge. Most people only charge it twice a year. The cable in the box is the only one you'll need.
What's the cleanup like?
Rinse the head under running water after each use. Once a week, twist off the cap and brush out any buildup with the included tool. Fully waterproof — no exposed electronics, no battery damage from rinsing.
Are parts replaceable?
Yes. Replacement blade heads are available, so the unit lasts indefinitely. Most people never need one, but if you do wear yours down, a replacement costs a fraction of a new trimmer.