Menopause Hair Loss and Thinning
Causes, Tests, and Treatment
Hormone shifts during perimenopause and menopause can change the hair growth cycle. Many women notice diffuse thinning, a wider part, or more shedding. At Arcara Access, we use testing and personalized care to find the root cause and support healthier hair growth.
Reviewed by Kim Arcara, PMHNP-BC, MSN, November 2025
What Menopause Hair Loss Looks Like
Menopause related hair loss can show up in a few clear, common ways:
- Diffuse thinning across the crown and a part line that slowly looks wider
- Increased shedding in the shower or on your hairbrush over many weeks
- Hair that feels drier, more brittle, and slower to grow between trims
- Thinning that stays steady over time or appears as short shedding episodes
When to seek urgent review: rapid patchy loss, scalp pain, scarring, or sudden heavy shedding after illness or new medication should be evaluated promptly.
Why Hair Loss Happens
Hormonal Shifts:
Lower and fluctuating estrogen and progesterone change the pace of the hair cycle over time. These shifts can also uncover a genetic tendency to thinning that shows up more clearly in midlife.
Telogen Effluvium Triggers:
Illness, surgery, high stress, low iron, thyroid shifts, or strict dieting can push follicles into a shed phase. Hair often starts to fall out more than usual about 6 to 12 weeks later.
Androgen Sensitive Patterns:
Some women notice thinning across the crown or part from androgen-sensitive follicles. Care combines sleep, nutrition, lab checks, and suitable hormonal or non-hormonal care.
What We Check
To understand what is driving menopause symptoms like thinning or excess shedding, we review your hair health and overall wellness.
- Hormone context: estradiol, progesterone, testosterone, and SHBG, when results would clearly change your care plan
- Root cause labs: thyroid panel, iron, ferritin, B12, vitamin D, glucose, or A1c to map metabolic and nutrient health
- Medication and life review: recent illness, new meds, major stress changes, weight shifts, or postpartum changes
- Scalp clues: scaling, redness, tenderness, or patchy loss that suggests a scalp condition needing dermatology input
What Helps Hair Loss
Sleep and Stress Foundations
Sleep and stress care from our Emotional Wellness program helps steady hormones and habits so the hair cycle recovers. Simple daily tools build calm, rest, and resilience.
Nutrition and Key Nutrients
Nutrition and supplements focus on protein, fiber, and key labs so hair has what it needs to grow. We correct low iron, ferritin, B12, or vitamin D without guesswork.
Hormone Therapy (When Appropriate)
BHRT at Arcara Access is tailored to your symptoms, labs, and goals. Personalized hormone therapy can ease hot flashes, improve sleep, and support healthy hair growth.
Evidence-Based Adjuncts
Evidence-based options include topical or oral treatments, gentle scalp routines, and realistic timelines, with dermatology input when signs suggest a scalp condition.
Peptide Therapy
Peptides can support energy, recovery, and metabolic balance alongside core care. When suitable, peptides help you feel stronger, so hair growth has a healthier base.
Timeline and Expectations
Hair growth follows a slow cycle, so changes appear in stages rather than overnight.
- Weeks 2 to 6: sleep and energy often improve as hot flashes calm, and many women start to notice less daily shedding and easier hair care.
- Weeks 8 to 12: hair may feel softer and fuller, with fewer strands on your brush as root causes are treated and your routine becomes more consistent.
- Three to six months: many women see visible fullness at the part and crown, with steadier shedding and a stable plan in place to protect long-term growth.
Hair Care and Lifestyle Tips
Simple changes in daily habits can support hair health alongside menopause symptoms care. These steps protect your scalp, reduce breakage, and back up your treatment plan.
Use gentle, non-stripping shampoo and conditioner to protect fragile strands and support a calmer scalp
Limit heat tools and tight styles that strain roots and can worsen breakage or thinning over time
Massage your scalp three to four times weekly to boost circulation and support a healthier growth cycle
Strength train twice each week to support lean muscle, metabolism, and the nutrients that feed hair
Manage night sweats and hot flashes early so sleep improves, which helps your body and hair recover
Symptoms like hair loss and thinning can be frustrating, but they are often manageable with the right plan and support. At Arcara Access, we combine testing, BHRT, nutrition, and coaching to gently guide your hair and overall wellness back to a healthier place.
FAQs
Is my shedding normal or a problem?
Some shedding is normal during menopause. If shedding becomes heavy for several weeks, or if you see patchy areas, schedule a review.
Do I need blood tests, or can I start products?
Testing is helpful because iron, ferritin, thyroid, B12, and vitamin D levels can strongly affect shedding. Products alone cannot correct deficiencies.
Can I improve density if thinning runs in my family?
How long until I see results?
Most women notice changes in texture by eight to twelve weeks and density shifts within three to six months.
What if I do not want hormones?
We offer non-hormonal care through nutrition, supplements, emotional wellness, and clinical recommendations when needed.
Which deficiencies most often worsen shedding?
Low ferritin, iron, B12, and vitamin D are common contributors to menopausal hair loss. Correcting these levels supports healthier growth.
Can stress alone cause hair loss?
Yes. Stress can push hair into a shedding cycle. Stress regulation and sleep support often help.
When should I see a dermatologist?
If you have redness, scaling, scarring, or patchy loss, a dermatologist can help identify scalp conditions.
How do I tell shedding from pattern thinning?
Shedding shows as hair coming out in volume. Pattern thinning shows as a wider part or thinner crown over time.
Do hairstyles, coloring, or heat tools make it worse?
Yes. Tight styles, frequent bleaching, and high heat can cause breakage and stress to the scalp.