Washing Your Hair Less Can Cause Hair Loss: The Truth About Scalp Hygiene + DHT

Washing Your Hair Less Can Cause Hair Loss: The Truth About Scalp Hygiene + DHT

Washing Your Hair Less Isn’t Healthier—It Might Be the Problem

If you’ve been told to wash your hair less to keep it “healthy,” you’re not alone. This advice is everywhere—especially online. But here’s the truth: not washing your hair often enough can actually contribute to hair thinning and hair loss.

In this episode of The Beauty Lab Podcast, Velia breaks down what’s really happening on your scalp, why oil buildup matters, and how a hormone called DHT plays a huge role in hair loss. No fear tactics. No influencer myths. Just real science explained in a way that actually makes sense.

Let’s get into it.

 

 

The Big Myth: You Can “Train” Your Scalp to Make Less Oil

One of the biggest hair myths out there is that if you stop washing your hair, your scalp will magically learn to produce less oil.

That’s not how it works.

Your scalp produces oil nonstop. Washing your hair doesn’t increase oil production—and skipping washes doesn’t reduce it. In fact, letting oil sit on your scalp too long can cause a chain reaction that leads to scalp issues and hair loss.

A little oil can help protect hair. Too much oil causes problems. Period.

What’s Actually Happening Under Your Scalp

Your hair doesn’t start growing at the surface—it starts deep under your skin in the hair follicle. Attached to each follicle is a sebaceous gland, which releases oil onto your scalp.

Here’s where things get messy.

That oil mixes with testosterone and an enzyme in your scalp, creating DHT (dihydrotestosterone). DHT doesn’t just hang out—it sends signals to your hair follicles.

And those signals are not friendly.

Why DHT Is the Real Villain in Hair Thinning

DHT tells your hair follicles to shrink. That means each new strand grows in thinner than the last. Over time, hair looks finer, weaker, and less dense—even if you’re still growing hair.

It also tells oil glands to get bigger and produce more oil, which creates more DHT.

So if oil stays on your scalp too long, the cycle continues:
More oil → more DHT → thinner hair → more oil.

The only way to stop that cycle? Wash the oil off your scalp.

Can Dirty or Oily Hair Actually Cause Hair Loss?

Yes. And there’s real science behind it.

When DHT sits on your scalp, it keeps sending “shrink” signals to your follicles. The longer it stays there, the more damage it can do. In extreme cases, follicles can clog and stop producing hair altogether.

This isn’t about length—it’s about thickness. Hair doesn’t always fall out right away. It often gets thinner first.

How Often Should You Really Be Washing Your Hair?

There’s no one-size-fits-all answer, but here’s a simple guideline:

  • Very oily scalps: daily washing
  • Most people: every other day or every two days
  • Once a week: too long for everyone

If you’re only shampooing once every few days, make sure you’re shampooing twice in the shower. One wash doesn’t remove days of buildup.

And no—washing your hair more often does not make your scalp produce more oil.

Dry Shampoo Isn’t a Fix (And It’s Not Hygiene)

Dry shampoo absorbs oil so hair looks cleaner, but it doesn’t remove oil, DHT, or buildup from your scalp.

It’s cosmetic, not hygienic.

Using it once before wash day is fine. Using it to avoid washing for days? That just adds more buildup to the problem.

What to Do If You’re Worried About Dry Hair

A lot of people avoid washing because their hair feels dry—but that’s a hair issue, not a scalp issue.

Instead of skipping washes:

  • Use a sulfate-free shampoo regularly
  • Avoid harsh clarifying shampoos unless needed
  • Add a weekly hair mask
  • Use products suited to your hair type

Clean scalp + conditioned hair = the goal.

Is Hair Loss From This Reversible?

In many cases, yes.

If hair thinning is caused by oil and DHT buildup, changing your wash routine can help. Start with washing every other day for at least a month. Watch how your scalp and hair respond.

If oil production calms down and hair starts looking fuller, you’re on the right track.

Hair loss myths are loud. Science is quieter—but way more helpful.

If you have any questions, simple email us!

Back to blog