Hair Transplant Recovery Timeline: What to Expect Week-by-Week
Updated March 2026
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12 min read
Part of our comprehensive hair transplant guide, this recovery timeline shows you what to expect at each stage. Hair transplant recovery follows a predictable pattern, but the timeline surprises most patients. You'll look worse before you look better, experience a complete shedding phase, then wait months before visible growth begins. Understanding this timeline prevents panic during the "ugly duckling" stages.
This guide walks you through every phase from surgery day to final result at 12-18 months.
Day of Surgery (Hour 0)
Immediately post-procedure:
Recipient area: Tiny scabs around each graft, minor bleeding (normal)
Donor area: FUE shows small dots, FUT has bandage over sutured area
Feeling: Numbness from anesthesia (wears off in 4-6 hours), mild tightness
Appearance: Swollen forehead (looks like you had Botox), redness
What to do:
Ice packs on forehead (NOT on grafts) to reduce swelling
Sleep elevated (45-degree angle) using wedge pillow or stacked pillows
Take prescribed medications (antibiotics, pain relief, anti-inflammatory)
Protective pillowcase (some blood/oozing first night is normal)
First night expectations:
Mild discomfort (2-4/10 pain scale)
Difficulty getting comfortable sleeping position
Some blood on pillowcase (small amount normal)
Forehead feels tight
Days 1-3: The Swelling Phase
What happens:
Swelling peaks day 2-3 (gravity pulls fluid down to forehead, sometimes around eyes)
Scabs forming around each graft
Donor area sore (FUT more uncomfortable than FUE)
Redness prominent
Physical sensations:
Tightness in scalp
Itching begins (sign of healing, resist scratching)
Mild throbbing if you bend over quickly
Numbness in transplanted area
Appearance:
Forehead swollen (sometimes dramatically — "Frankenstein" look)
Black eyes possible (rare, happens when swelling migrates down)
Scabs visible (looks like scraped scalp)
Donor area: FUE looks like red dots, FUT has bandage
Activity level:
Stay home, rest
No bending over
No exercise
Gentle walking okay
Work from home if desk job
First wash (day 2 or 3):
Clinic usually performs first wash or provides detailed instructions
Extremely gentle (pour water, don't spray)
Special shampoo (provided by clinic)
Pat dry with soft cloth
Days 4-7: Scabs Begin Shedding
What happens:
Swelling receding significantly
Scabs starting to soften and lift
Itching intensifies (most annoying phase)
FUT sutures may dissolve or be removed day 7
Physical sensations:
Intense itching (antihistamines help)
Less tightness
Numbness still present (normal for weeks-months)
Donor area healing well (FUE nearly invisible, FUT scar pink)
Appearance:
Forehead swelling 70-90% gone
Scabs prominent but starting to lift edges
Redness fading to pink
Small amount of shock loss (existing hairs shedding) may start
Activity level:
Can return to desk work (day 7-10)
Light activities okay
No gym, swimming, heavy exercise
Avoid direct sun (wear loose hat if going out)
No helmets, tight hats
Washing:
Daily gentle washing (helps scabs shed naturally)
Can use slightly more water pressure by day 7
Don't pick at scabs (they'll come off with washing)
Days 7-14: Scabs Gone, Looking More Normal
What happens:
Most/all scabs shed naturally
Transplanted area looks pink but healing
Small red dots where grafts placed (fading)
FUT sutures removed (if not dissolvable)
Physical sensations:
Itching decreasing
Scalp feeling more normal
Occasional "zingers" (nerve regeneration — brief sharp sensations, normal)
Donor area comfortable
Appearance:
Scabs gone or nearly gone
Pink scalp where grafts were placed
Transplanted hairs standing up (short, from day of surgery)
Overall looks acceptable to public
Activity level:
Back to work (can wear hat if needed to cover pinkness)
Light exercise okay (walking, light jogging)
No heavy gym, swimming, contact sports yet
Can wear loose baseball cap
Safe to fly: After day 7, most surgeons clear patients for air travel
Weeks 2-4: The Shedding Phase Begins
What happens — the phase that causes the most panic:
Transplanted hairs fall out. This is called "shock loss" or telogen effluvium.
What you see:
Transplanted hairs (the ones placed during surgery) shedding
Sometimes existing (non-transplanted) hairs also shed temporarily
Area looks thin, sometimes thinner than pre-transplant
What's actually happening:
Hair shafts shed but follicles remain alive beneath skin
Follicles enter resting (telogen) phase before growing new hair
This is NORMAL and EXPECTED
Critical to understand:
This is NOT failed transplant
The follicles are fine
New hair will grow from those follicles starting month 3-4
Analogy: Like a plant being repotted — it drops leaves initially but the roots are establishing
Appearance:
Thin or very thin in transplanted area
Can look worse than before procedure
Donor area healing well (FUE: tiny white dots if you look closely, FUT: pink line)
Activity level:
Normal activities resumed
Can resume gym (after day 14)
Swimming okay after week 3-4
Avoid direct trauma to scalp (no contact sports yet)
Emotional state: This is the hardest phase psychologically. Expect:
Worry that transplant "didn't work"
Regret ("I looked better before")
Impatience
Solution: Trust the process. Every successful transplant goes through this. Look at before/after timelines online — everyone experiences shedding.
Months 1-3: The Dormant Phase ("Nothing Happening")
What happens:
Not much visible activity
Scalp looks relatively normal but thin
Follicles beneath skin preparing for growth phase
Physical sensations:
Scalp feels normal
Numbness mostly resolved (small areas may remain numb 3-6 months)
Occasional itching (new hair starting beneath surface)
Appearance:
Thin in transplanted area
Redness completely resolved
Donor area: FUE scars barely visible, FUT scar pink/red (fading over 12 months)
No visible hair growth yet
Psychological challenge:
Hardest waiting period
"Did I waste my money?"
Checking mirror obsessively (don't — you won't see daily changes)
What to do:
Take monthly photos (same lighting, same angle)
Focus on other things
Follow medication protocol if prescribed (finasteride, minoxidil)
Attend follow-up appointments
Months 3-6: New Growth Emerges
Month 3-4: First visible growth
Fine, wispy hairs emerging
Very thin initially (like peach fuzz)
Growth is patchy (different follicles activate at different times)
Some areas grow faster than others
Physical characteristics of new hair:
Finer texture than mature hair
May be lighter color
Curly or wavy initially (normalizes later)
Sparse coverage
Month 5-6: Accelerating growth
Hair thickening
Length increasing (hair grows ~1cm/month)
Patchiness filling in
Visible improvement starts becoming noticeable
Appearance:
30-50% of final density visible
Still thin but improving
Can style hair (gentle brushing okay)
Results starting to look encouraging
Psychological shift:
Relief ("It's finally working!")
Impatience to see final result
Temptation to judge result too early (wait until month 12)
Months 6-9: Significant Visible Improvement
What happens:
Steady, consistent thickening
Hair texture maturing
Density increasing week by week
Appearance:
50-70% of final density
Noticeable improvement
Can style normally
Most patients satisfied with this stage (though not final result)
Hair characteristics:
Texture normalizing
Caliber thickening
Color darkening to match native hair
Activity:
Completely normal life
All exercises safe
Can dye hair (after month 6)
Can get haircuts (tell stylist about transplant if going short)
Months 9-12: Near-Final Result
What happens:
Approaching full density
Hair fully matured
Minor continued thickening months 12-18
Appearance:
70-90% of final density achieved
Result looks natural and complete
Ready for assessment
Month 12 evaluation:
Official result checkpoint
Surgeon assesses graft survival
Determine if touch-up needed
Some clinics offer free touch-up if areas didn't grow well
Questions to ask surgeon at month 12:
What's the graft survival rate?
Are there areas needing more density?
Should I wait until month 18 to assess?
Is a touch-up recommended?
Months 12-18: Final Maturation
What happens:
Continued subtle thickening
Hair caliber increasing slightly
Final texture settling
Appearance:
90-100% of final density
Completely natural look
Indistinguishable from native hair
This is final result. What you see at month 18 is what you have permanently.
Shock Loss of Existing Hair
Important to distinguish:
Transplanted hair shedding: Expected, normal, happens to everyone
Shock loss of existing (native) hair: Happens to ~20-40% of patients
What is shock loss?
Non-transplanted hairs near transplant area go into shedding phase
Caused by trauma to scalp (surgery stress)
Temporary — hair grows back within 3-6 months
Who gets it:
More common in people with miniaturized (thinning) hair
Less common in people with thick, healthy existing hair
Unpredictable
What to do:
Don't panic
Continue finasteride (if prescribed) to help hair return
Wait — it grows back
Permanent loss:
True permanent shock loss is rare (<5% of patients)
Usually happens only with very aggressive packing or poor technique
Recovery Comparison: FUE vs FUT
Similarities:
Same recipient area healing
Same scabbing and shedding timeline
Same growth phases
Differences:
| Stage | FUE | FUT |
|-------|-----|-----|
| Immediate pain | 2-4/10 | 3-5/10 |
| Donor healing | 7-10 days | 10-14 days |
| Sutures | None | Removed day 7-14 |
| Return to exercise | Day 10-14 | Day 14-21 |
| Donor numbness | Rare | Common (3-12 months) |
| Donor appearance (healed) | Tiny white dots | Thin linear scar |
Red Flags During Recovery
When to contact your surgeon immediately:
Week 1-2:
Excessive bleeding (more than small amount)
Pus or yellow discharge
Increasing redness/swelling after day 3
Fever (>100.4°F / 38°C)
Severe pain (>6/10) not controlled by medication
Month 3-6:
No growth at all by month 6 (rare but requires investigation)
Severe shock loss continuing beyond month 4
Month 12+:
Extremely poor graft survival (<60%)
Infection or cyst formation
Most concerning sign: Increasing symptoms after initial improvement (suggests infection)
Managing Expectations Timeline
Be patient. Final result takes 12-18 months.
Common milestones to remember:
Month 1: Looks thin (this is normal)
Month 3: First growth appears
Month 6: Visible improvement
Month 12: Near-final result
Month 18: Final result
Don't judge before month 12. Early assessment leads to unnecessary worry.
Next steps:
Learn proper aftercare: Hair Transplant Aftercare Guide
Understand success factors: Hair Transplant Success Rate
Return to main guide: Complete Hair Transplant Guide