Your baseline: what's normal, what's worth paying attention to
Between 50 and 100 hairs a day is completely normal. Seeing hair in the shower doesn't mean you're doing anything wrong. The red flag comes when you spot physical changes: a wider parting, visible scalp, less volume when you style it.
When that happens, you're likely looking at female pattern hair loss (androgenic alopecia) where your follicles are shrinking because they're sensitive to androgen hormones. Most women wait. But hair loss is easier to slow or reverse in early stages.
How androgen sensitivity makes follicles smaller
Your hair follicles have receptors that respond to DHT, a powerful form of androgen. When the signal hits, the follicle shrinks and shortens its growth phase. This doesn't happen overnight. It takes years, which is why catching it early matters so much.
In a healthy scalp, 85 to 90% of follicles are actively growing at any time. Which means the hair you're shedding is being replaced. As androgenic alopecia develops, more shift into the resting, shedding phase, and fewer restart the cycle. So you're losing hair but not growing it back.
A 2021 international guideline from the European Dermatology Forum found that early-stage female pattern hair loss responds significantly better to treatment than advanced loss. Starting treatment within the first 5 years of noticeable thinning offers the best chance of halting progression and regrowing hair.
Why the thinning accelerates in your 30s
Androgens stay pretty steady, but estrogen starts to slip downward in your 30s. That relative shift means your scalp is getting more androgen effect than it used to. Add chronic stress on top, and your cortisol rises, which can pump up androgen production even more and trigger more shedding.
Genetics matter most though. If your mother or grandmother had thinning hair, your odds go up significantly. This is the surprise insight: your hair loss trajectory is already written. But when you start treating it is entirely up to you.
The treatments that actually work
Two have real evidence: minoxidil and finasteride. Both work best if you start early and keep using them. Stop either one, and the hair loss comes back within months. You're not curing the underlying process, just slowing it. This matters because it changes the decision you need to make.
Minoxidil (Rogaine) 5%
Topical minoxidil is applied twice daily to the scalp. It extends the active growth phase of follicles and can regrow hair or slow loss in 60% of women. Results take 3โ6 months to appear. Available over the counter.
Finasteride (Propecia/Proscar)
Finasteride blocks DHT (dihydrotestosterone), the form of androgen most potent in follicle miniaturization. Taken as a daily pill, it has strong evidence for slowing loss and regrowing hair in women. Requires prescription; effectiveness takes 6โ12 months.
Scalp health optimization
Gentle scalp care (avoiding tight hairstyles, minimizing heat), stress reduction, and iron sufficiency all support follicle health. Some evidence supports low-level laser therapy, though the effect is modest.
What to tell your doctor
- Track when thinning started. Gradual onset in your 30s is typical of androgenic alopecia; sudden rapid shedding warrants investigation for other causes (thyroid, iron deficiency, autoimmune).
- Mention family history. If your mother or grandmother experienced hair loss, this confirms genetic predisposition and guides treatment urgency.
- Describe the pattern. Thinning at the crown and temples is classic female pattern hair loss; diffuse shedding across the entire scalp may indicate another condition.
- Ask about ferritin and thyroid levels. Iron deficiency and thyroid dysfunction both trigger hair loss and are easily treated once identified.
When to See a Dermatologist
If you've noticed progressive hair thinning over 6+ months, a dermatologist can diagnose female pattern hair loss and discuss treatment timing. Early intervention (within the first 5 years of onset) offers the best outcomes. Prescription finasteride requires medical supervision and monitoring.
Sources & Research
- Ramos PM, Miot HA. Female Pattern Alopecia: clinical and pathophysiological review. Anais Brasileiros de Dermatologia. 2015.
- Blumeyer A, Tosti A, Messenger A, et al. Evidence-based (S3) guideline for the treatment of androgenetic alopecia in women and men. Journal of the European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology. 2021.
- Grymowicz M, Rudnicka E, Podfigurna A, et al. Hormonal Effects on Hair Follicles. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2020.
- Brough KR, Torgerson RR. Antiandrogen therapy for the treatment of female pattern hair loss. Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology. 2023.