If you are seeing more hair on your pillow, your brush, your shower drain — and your jacket sleeve seems to collect strands no matter what — you are not imagining it, and you are not alone. Hair shedding is one of the most common and most quietly distressing experiences for women in their thirties and forties.
Here is the calm version: why it happens, what is normal, what is not, and what to actually check first.
A note before we start
Hair loss is emotional. Take a breath. Most causes of female hair shedding have patterns, and many are addressable. Significant or persistent shedding deserves a doctor's visit — not for panic, but for clarity.
What "normal" shedding looks like
Healthy adults lose about 50–100 hairs per day. It is part of normal hair cycling. After washing or brushing, you might see 100–200 in one go because they have accumulated — that does not mean you lost them all that day.
What matters is patterns:
- Sustained increase compared to your usual baseline
- Visible thinning of density (less at the part, less in the ponytail circumference)
- Hair coming out in clumps
- Bald patches or scalp visibility where there wasn't before
- Hair changes alongside other symptoms
If you notice any of these for more than 2–3 months, it is worth investigating.
“Most causes of female hair shedding have patterns, and many are addressable.”
— Feel AWSM Editorial
The most common causes in women 30+
Hair shedding has multiple drivers — often more than one at the same time.
1. Telogen effluvium (stress shedding)
A temporary shift where more hairs enter the shedding phase, usually 2–4 months after a trigger. Triggers include:
- Major stress
- Illness or fever
- Surgery
- Significant weight loss
- Crash dieting
- Postpartum (very common, peaks 3–5 months after birth)
- Stopping or starting hormonal contraception
- Severe emotional events
- COVID and other viral infections
Pattern: diffuse shedding all over the scalp. Usually resolves within 6–12 months once the trigger passes.
2. Iron deficiency / low ferritin
One of the most common, most reversible causes in women. Especially likely with:
- Heavy menstrual bleeding
- Vegetarian or vegan diets without careful planning
- Postpartum
- After surgery or significant blood loss
Pattern: diffuse shedding, sometimes alongside fatigue, brittle nails, pale skin.
3. Thyroid changes
Both hypothyroidism (under-active) and hyperthyroidism (over-active) can cause hair shedding.
Pattern: diffuse shedding, often with other symptoms — cold/heat intolerance, weight changes, mood changes, cycle changes.
4. Hormonal shifts and PCOS
Higher androgens (testosterone and similar hormones) can shrink susceptible follicles, causing female-pattern hair loss. PCOS is a common contributor.
Pattern: gradual thinning along the central parting, more visible scalp at the part line.
5. Perimenopause and menopause
Oestrogen has a hair-protective effect. As levels decline, many women see changes in hair density, texture, and growth speed.
Pattern: diffuse thinning, slower growth, finer texture, sometimes with cycle irregularities.
6. Postpartum
Pregnancy keeps more hairs in the growth phase; after birth, many shed at once. Peaks 3–5 months postpartum, usually resolves by 12 months.
7. Seasonal shedding
Some women experience increased shedding in autumn and to a lesser extent spring. This is normal and self-limiting.
8. Mechanical stress
Tight ponytails, braids, extensions, harsh brushing, frequent heat styling, chemical processing — all can damage hair shafts and follicles over time.
9. Nutritional gaps
Crash diets, very low calorie eating, very low protein eating, B12 deficiency, zinc deficiency.
10. Medications
Some medications list hair shedding as a side effect — including some antidepressants, blood pressure medications, and others. If shedding started within months of a new medication, ask your doctor.
What to check first (the honest list)
Before buying anything, get tested. Ask your doctor for:
- Ferritin (iron stores) — ideally above 30–40 ng/mL for hair, often higher
- Full thyroid panel — TSH, free T4, sometimes free T3 and antibodies
- Vitamin D — low status is very common
- Vitamin B12 — especially if vegetarian or vegan
- Sometimes a full hormone panel if PCOS is suspected
- Sometimes coeliac screening if other symptoms suggest it
A meaningful percentage of female hair shedding is reversible once the underlying issue is addressed.
What helps while you investigate
Be gentle
Wide-tooth comb on damp hair. Skip tight ponytails. Reduce heat styling. Soft pillowcase. Patience.
Eat enough protein
1.2–1.6 g per kg body weight per day. Hair is mostly protein; under-eating shows up in hair within months.
Sleep
Repair happens at night.
Stress regulation
Real stress care — sleep, walking, breath, boundaries.
Authorised-claim nutrients (sensible doses)
Once tested:
- Iron — only with low ferritin confirmed, with vitamin C, separated from coffee
- Zinc — contributes to maintenance of normal hair, skin, nails (sensible doses, 7.5–15 mg)
- Selenium — contributes to maintenance of normal hair and nails
- Biotin — contributes to maintenance of normal hair (relevant only if deficient)
- Vitamin D3 — contributes to normal immune function and muscle function
- Vitamin C — contributes to normal collagen formation for skin and indirectly follicle health
These are within authorised wording — they support normal hair maintenance. They do not regrow hair from bald patches.
When to see a dermatologist
This deserves its own decision: please see a dermatologist if you have:
- Visible thinning that has not resolved in 3+ months
- Bald patches or scalp visibility
- Scalp pain, redness, or itching alongside shedding
- Scarring or smooth shiny patches
- Family history of pattern hair loss
- Postpartum shedding lasting beyond 12 months
- Significant emotional distress
Female-pattern hair loss has well-evidenced medical treatments. Earlier is easier. Do not wait until your ponytail tells the whole story.
What to be careful with
- "Hair growth gummies" with sub-effective doses
- High-dose biotin without deficiency (interferes with blood tests)
- Iron supplementation without testing
- Aggressive scalp products without dermatology input
- "Regrows hair in 30 days" promises
- DIY social-media protocols
What to look for vs what to be careful with
| Look for | Be careful with | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Testing first | Buying a hair gummy first | Right diagnosis often resolves it |
| Authorised-claim nutrients at sensible doses | Mega-dose biotin | Affects blood tests, modest effect |
| Dermatology referral if patterns suggest | Self-treatment indefinitely | Some loss is medical |
| Adequate protein and calories | Restrictive eating | Under-eating worsens shedding |
| Realistic 6–12 month timelines | "Regrowth in 30 days" | Hair grows ~1.25 cm/month |
When to talk to a healthcare professional
If you are concerned, now. If shedding has lasted more than 3 months, definitely. Please do not wait.
The final takeaway
Hair shedding has patterns. Most common in women 30+: telogen effluvium, iron, thyroid, hormonal shifts, postpartum, perimenopause. Test first. Address what is testable. Be gentle while you wait. Hair grows slowly — give the picture 6–12 months of patience. And please see a dermatologist if you are scared. Earlier is genuinely easier.
---
Aligned with EU health authority guidance · EFSA-authorised claims · Reg. (EC) No 1924/2006