Reasonable Quality but Dishonest Marketing
The halo extensions are a good color match and the fittings work well (the wire and net). The hair quality is identical to the £10 extensions on Amazon (I have both and can't tell the hair texture apart and the pattern on the net is identical also). But, Hairebel has more hair (attached in 3 rows) so it feels and looks a bit better than the super-cheap ones.
Although the company suggests they're in Spain and the US, they actually dropship from JD.com, a Chinese company, adding their own branding to standard halo extensions. So, expect a good 2 or even 3 weeks for the extensions to finally arrive, as they'll come from China.
Also, they pay a lot of "influencers" to make TikToks and go really heavy on the advertising and marketing. And they have thousands of obviously fake reviews on another review website (all of which are only 1 to 3 words long - you can find this yourself to see what I mean).
All in all, I'm mostly pleased with the quality of the halo extensions. You can use a flat iron or curling wand on them (as long as you keep the heat low and secure them until cool, as synthetic hair won't "hold" the curls until cool) and presumably you can also wash/clean them. I haven't done that yet. I use a looped wig brush to brush them. A few of the hairs have come out but nothing noticeable. On the Hairebel website they do make some sketchy claims (such as appearing in Cosmopolitan magazine about their extensions, which I can find NO evidence of) and shipping from various places (when it's just from a big warehouse in China). And their "best ever synthetic hair" is the exact same hair as on my much cheaper halo from Amazon, not a proprietary product.
In conclusion, if you want to spend £35ish on a halo extension and you don't mind synthetic hair and a long shipping time, I don't think you'll be disappointed with Hairebel. I dislike their dishonest marketing tactics but the extensions aren't that bad.
5 September 2025
Unprompted review