It's tradition for married Thai women to sport high buns. These 'bun helmets' accommodate their hair without compromising their safety

A Thai woman with a high bun sits astride a motorcycle. Beside her is a blue motorcycle helmet with a bump to accomodate buns.

For too long, Thai women like Ha Thi Binh were faced with a daily conundrum when they hopped on their motorcycles in Vietnam. Thai customs dictated that married women wear their hair in a high bun, but the law said all cyclists had to use a helmet. 

The six-inch high bun is more than just a fashionable hairstyle. In an interview with the humanitarian organization CARE, Binh said that it's a revered tradition for married Thai women to wear the bun. She explained that if she let her hair down in public, it would signal that she was being “unfaithful” to her husband. 

“It’s an affirmation that the woman is married,” Binh told CARE last summer. “We all do it the same way.”

As the breadwinner for her household, Binh drives her motorcycle daily to her coffee cooperative company Ara Tay in Son La, Vietnam. For years, she faced the frustration of choosing to follow tradition or follow the law. 

A Thai woman with a high bun sits astride a motorcycle. Beside her is a blue motorcycle helmet with a bump to accomodate buns.
Image via Laura Noel/CARE

Often, women attempted to do both, which was uncomfortable and dangerous. Others chose to forgo one or the other — choosing between safety or tradition — because there wasn’t a helmet that accommodated those high buns. 

“The current ordinary crash helmets just fail to protect these women,” deputy chairman of Vietnam’s National Traffic Safety Committee, Khuat Viet Hung, said in a statement to the press.

After two years of tinkering, Vietnam’s Ministry of Science and Technology launched a special motorcycle helmet with added bun room. After it passed safety tests, it was distributed to low-income households in six provinces throughout Vietnam. 

Today, it's commonplace to see the unique helmet atop cyclists’ heads on Vietnamese roadways. Thai women like Binh can finally travel in style: safely and fashionably. 

A version of this article originally appeared in the 2024 Gender Edition of the Goodnewspaper

Header image via Laura Noel/CARE

Article Details

May 26, 2026 11:35 AM
A photo collage of a sea turtle, an aerial view of a neighborhood's buildings, Olympic skier Hunter Hess, a teacher at the front of a class with a bald eagle on a table, and a wild jaguar spotted in Argentina

Good News This Week: May 23, 2026 - Puffins, Teabags, & Jaguars

Your weekly roundup of the best good news worth celebrating...
An otter swims underwater

Meet Splash, the country's first 'search and recovery' otter, who can find missing people underwater

The otter can hold his breath underwater for five minutes and has brilliant odor-tracking skills.
No items found.

Too much bad news? Let’s fix that.

Negativity is everywhere — but you can choose a different story.
The
Goodnewspaper brings a monthly dose of hope,
delivered straight to your door. Your first issue is
free (just $1 shipping).

Start your good news journey today