While you are figuring out the underlying cause of more shedding than usual — and ideally seeing a doctor — what you do day to day still matters. The right scalp routine is not going to regrow hair from a thinning patch, but it can support a healthier scalp environment, reduce mechanical breakage, and make the hair you have look its best.
Here is the calm, dermatology-aligned routine that makes sense for most women dealing with shedding.
A note before we start
If you have visible thinning, scalp pain, redness, or significant hair loss, please see a dermatologist. This routine is supportive, not diagnostic.
The principles
Before products, principles:
- Your scalp is skin — treat it gently
- Less is often more — over-care often causes problems
- Mechanical stress matters — handling damages hair shafts
- Internal foundation matters most — protein, sleep, stress, deficiencies
- Consistency over months, not weeks — hair grows slowly
“If you have visible thinning, scalp pain, redness, or significant hair loss, please see a dermatologist.”
— Feel AWSM Editorial
The scalp routine — the simple version
Wash less frequently
Most women with shedding do better washing every 2–3 days, sometimes less. Daily washing strips natural sebum, can over-exfoliate the scalp barrier, and means more wet handling (when hair is at its weakest).
If your scalp gets oily, dry shampoo between washes is fine — but use sparingly and let it sit only a few minutes before brushing out.
Use a gentle, scalp-appropriate shampoo
For most women with shedding:
- Gentler surfactants (cocoyl isethionate, glucosides, milder sulfates)
- pH-balanced (4.5–6)
- Low or no fragrance
- Avoid common irritants (methylisothiazolinone, formaldehyde releasers if sensitive)
For dandruff or seborrheic dermatitis presence:
- Pyrithione zinc, ketoconazole, or salicylic acid shampoos 2–3 times a week, alternated with a gentle baseline shampoo
Use lukewarm water
Hot water strips oils and dries hair. Lukewarm or even cool rinses are kinder.
Massage gently
Use the pads of your fingers, not your nails. A 30-second to 2-minute massage during shampooing supports scalp circulation and is satisfying — but skip aggressive scrubbing.
Condition mid-lengths to ends
Skip heavy conditioner on the scalp itself if you have an oily scalp. Apply from mid-length down. For dry scalps, light conditioner can be okay near roots.
Rinse thoroughly
Product residue can cause irritation and dullness.
After washing
Towel gently
Pat or squeeze water out. Do not rub vigorously — wet hair is at its most fragile.
Microfibre or cotton towel
Microfibre absorbs water faster, reducing the time hair stays wet. Cotton works too. Avoid coarse texture.
Air dry where possible
Heat is a major driver of dry, brittle hair. Air drying at least to 70–80% before any heat styling helps.
Heat protectant if styling
Always with heat. Always.
Wide-tooth comb on damp hair
Detangle gently, working from the ends up. Brushes pull more.
Daily handling
Loose styles when possible
Tight ponytails, buns, and braids cause traction damage over time. Even regular wear of moderately tight styles can cause traction alopecia at the front and sides — which can become permanent.
If you wear hair up, vary the position. Use soft hair ties or coil ties instead of tight elastics.
Silk or satin pillowcase
Reduces friction and breakage at night. Worth the investment.
Avoid pulling on damp hair
Hair is at its most fragile when wet. Detangle carefully.
Reduce heat styling
Daily heat styling is a major contributor to dry, brittle, breaking hair. Reduce frequency, use lower temperatures, and always use a heat protectant.
Sun protection
UV damages keratin. A hat, a leave-in with UV filters, or shade for prolonged sun exposure protects hair quality and colour.
Scalp massage — what we know
Some research suggests regular scalp massage may modestly support hair density. The mechanism is debated (circulation, stretching of follicles).
A reasonable approach:
- 3–5 minutes daily, with the pads of fingers
- Gentle pressure, no nails
- Can be done dry or in the shower
- Use a clean dry scalp or with shampoo, not heavy oils that need washing out
This is supportive, not transformative. Combine with everything else.
Where supplements fit (within authorised claims)
- Zinc — contributes to maintenance of normal hair, skin, nails (7.5–15 mg)
- Selenium — contributes to maintenance of normal hair and nails
- Biotin — contributes to maintenance of normal hair (only if deficient; watch blood-test interference at high doses)
- Vitamin D — common low status
- Iron — only with testing showing low ferritin
- Vitamin C — contributes to normal collagen formation (skin)
- Adequate protein — hair is mostly protein
These support the foundation. They are not regrowth treatments.
Lifestyle — the real foundation
- Adequate protein (1.2–1.6 g/kg body weight per day)
- Adequate calories — under-eating shows up in hair within months
- Sleep — repair happens overnight
- Stress regulation — chronic stress is a real driver of shedding
- Address underlying conditions — iron, thyroid, hormonal patterns
What to be careful with
- Aggressive scalp scrubbing
- Daily hot showers
- Tight hairstyles every day
- Frequent heat styling
- Crash diets pursued for weight goals
- Buying hair products instead of seeing a doctor
What to look for vs what to be careful with
| Look for | Be careful with | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Wash 2–3 days, gentle shampoo, lukewarm water | Daily hot shower with harsh shampoo | Strips barrier and damages hair |
| Air dry, gentle handling | Heat styling daily | Heat damages keratin |
| Loose styles, silk pillowcase | Tight ponytails daily | Traction damage |
| Address underlying causes | Aggressive scalp products | Foundation matters more than products |
When to talk to a healthcare professional
Significant shedding, visible thinning, scalp pain or redness, or shedding lasting more than 3 months — please see a dermatologist.
The final takeaway
A simple scalp routine for women dealing with more shedding: wash gently every 2–3 days, lukewarm water, gentle shampoo, fingertip massage, air dry, loose styles, silk pillowcase, less heat. Pair with adequate protein, sleep, stress care, and authorised-claim nutrients at sensible doses. See a dermatologist for visible thinning. Be patient — hair changes slowly. Be kind to yourself in the meantime.
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Aligned with EU health authority guidance · EFSA-authorised claims · Reg. (EC) No 1924/2006