Skip to main content
Updated

Hair Loss After Deep Plane Facelift

Quick Answer

Will I lose hair after a deep plane facelift?

Temporary hair loss occurs in 5–10% of patients, most commonly around the temporal hairline and behind the ears. Both telogen effluvium (stress-related shedding) and incisional alopecia are almost always temporary. Hair typically regrows within 3–6 months. Permanent loss is rare (<1%) with experienced surgeons using trichophytic closure technique.

Source: DeepPlane.com

Understanding Hair Loss After Facelift

Hair loss after a deep plane facelift is one of the more distressing complications patients experience — largely because it's unexpected. Most patients are prepared for swelling and bruising but are surprised when hair begins shedding weeks after surgery. The good news: the vast majority of facelift-related hair loss is temporary and fully reversible. Understanding the specific types helps patients navigate recovery with confidence.

  • Temporary hair loss occurs in 5–10% of facelift patients
  • Telogen effluvium is the most common type — triggered by surgical stress
  • Trichophytic incision closure is the gold-standard prevention technique

Hair loss around facelift incisions and at the temporal hairline is a recognized side effect of deep plane facelift surgery. It occurs in approximately 5–10% of patients and is almost always temporary. The primary mechanisms are telogen effluvium (stress-induced shedding) and incisional alopecia (hair loss at the incision site). Understanding both helps patients follow the right recovery protocol and know when to seek treatment. Other complications have different timelines and mechanisms — this page focuses specifically on hair-related effects.

Complimentary · No obligation · Reply within 48h

Three Types of Hair Loss After Facelift

Telogen Effluvium

Diffuse shedding triggered by surgical stress. Most common. Begins 6–12 weeks post-op. Fully reversible.

Incisional Alopecia

Loss directly at incision line from wound healing. Prevented by trichophytic closure technique.

Traction Alopecia

From excessive wound closure tension. Rare with deep plane technique — less skin tension than traditional lifts.

Hair Loss After Deep Plane Facelift: Post-facelift hair loss refers to temporary shedding that occurs at the temporal hairline and near incision sites following surgery. The most common type, telogen effluvium, is triggered by surgical stress and causes hair follicles to enter a resting phase. Both telogen effluvium and incisional alopecia are almost universally temporary, with full regrowth expected within 3–6 months.

DeepPlane.com Expert Panel

Hair Loss After Facelift: Quick Facts

Incidence
Temporary in 5–10% of patients
Primary Cause
Telogen effluvium + incision tension
Affected Areas
Temporal hairline, behind ears
Regrowth Timeline
3–6 months
Permanent Loss Rate
Less than 1%
Prevention
Trichophytic incision closure

Source: Clinical Studies & The Aesthetic Society

Telogen Effluvium: The Most Common Type

Telogen effluvium is a temporary form of hair loss triggered by physiological stress — including surgical procedures. Normally, about 85–90% of hair follicles are in the active growth phase (anagen). After a significant stressor like surgery, a larger-than-normal proportion of follicles simultaneously shift into the resting phase (telogen), causing noticeable shedding 6 to 12 weeks later.

This shedding can alarm patients who are weeks into what seemed like smooth recovery. It typically affects the temporal hairline most noticeably but can involve areas across the scalp. The hair follicles themselves are not permanently damaged — they eventually re-enter the growth phase, and hair density returns to normal within 3 to 6 months in virtually all cases.

Risk factors for telogen effluvium include nutritional deficiencies (particularly iron and protein), significant weight loss, anemia, and prolonged surgeries. Ensuring good pre-operative nutritional status and a relatively brief anesthesia time reduces this risk.

Incision Placement and the Trichophytic Closure Technique

Incisional alopecia — hair loss directly along the incision line — is determined largely by where and how the surgeon places and closes the incisions. For deep plane facelifts, the temporal incision runs along or within the hairline. If the incision transects hair follicles perpendicularly, the resulting scar may have a visible hairless margin.

Trichophytic closure addresses this by beveling the incision at an angle so that hair follicles are oriented to grow directly through the scar. This makes any scarring virtually invisible, as hair covers it naturally. This technique is considered the gold standard for hairline facelift incisions and is used routinely by experienced deep plane surgeons.

Additionally, placing the temporal incision within the hair-bearing scalp (a retrotrichial or post-trichial incision) rather than at the very edge of the hairline reduces the visibility of any hair loss that does occur.

Special Considerations for Male Patients

Male patients undergoing deep plane facelift require additional considerations regarding male-specific anatomy. Men's temporal hair is often finer and more susceptible to traction alopecia, and male-pattern hairline recession means incision placement requires extra care to avoid creating visible scars in areas already prone to further hair loss.

Surgeons experienced with male facelifts carefully design incisions that account for potential future hairline recession. Bearded skin also pulls differently at the sideburn and pre-auricular incisions, which must be planned to avoid displacing beard-bearing skin onto the earlobe or neck.

Treatment Options If Hair Loss Occurs

Watchful Waiting (Most Cases)

Most post-facelift hair loss is self-limiting. With patience, the majority of patients see full regrowth without intervention.

Minoxidil (Topical)

Topical minoxidil can be applied to affected areas (after incisions are healed) to stimulate regrowth. Evidence supports its use in telogen effluvium.

PRP (Platelet-Rich Plasma)

Injections of platelet-rich plasma into affected areas can accelerate follicle re-entry into the growth phase. Increasingly used for post-surgical hair loss.

Hair Transplant (Rare, Last Resort)

For the small minority with truly permanent incisional alopecia, hair follicle transplantation into the scar line can restore density. Only considered after 12 months.

Regrowth Timeline

Weeks 1–6

Surgery and healing phase. Hair loss typically not yet apparent; follicles entering resting phase.

Weeks 6–12

Shedding phase. Patients notice increased hair loss at hairline and near incisions. This is the peak concern period.

Months 3–4

Regrowth begins. Fine new hairs visible at hairline and incision margins. Shedding slows significantly.

Months 6–12

Full density typically restored. The vast majority of patients have complete regrowth by 6 months. A small percentage continue improving through month 12.

Your Questions Answered

Medical References

  1. [1]
  2. [2]
  3. [3]
  4. [4]
    Mayo Clinic - Facelift: Overview, Risks and Results(Organization)Accessed: 2026-04-01
  5. [5]
    NIH National Library of Medicine - Rhytidectomy StatPearls(Government Source)Accessed: 2026-04-01

Key Facts

Post-facelift hair lossis most commonly caused bytelogen effluvium triggered by surgical stress
Facelift-related hair losstypically resolves within3 to 6 months
Trichophytic closureprevents visibleincisional alopecia at facelift hairline incisions
Permanent hair loss after deep plane faceliftoccurs in fewer than1% of patients

Common Misconceptions

Myth: Hair loss after facelift is permanent

Fact: Over 99% of post-facelift hair loss is temporary. Telogen effluvium fully reverses within 3–6 months in virtually all patients.

Myth: All facelift incisions leave a visible bald line at the hairline

Fact: With trichophytic closure technique, hair grows through the scar and the incision line becomes virtually invisible. Technique choice matters enormously.

Myth: Noticing hair shedding at week 8 means something went wrong

Fact: Shedding at 6–12 weeks is the expected timeline for telogen effluvium. This is when follicles are entering the resting phase — regrowth typically follows within 2–3 months.

Essential Considerations

Ask your surgeon about trichophytic closure technique before scheduling surgery

Optimize iron, protein, and overall nutritional status pre-operatively

Wait at least 4–6 weeks before dyeing or chemically treating hair

Discuss PRP or minoxidil options with your surgeon if shedding is significant

Stay informed about deep plane facelift

Join 12,000+ readers — monthly research updates, surgeon spotlights, and patient guides. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

Explore More

Medically Reviewed

Dr. Yakup Duman

Plastic, Reconstructive & Aesthetic Surgery Specialist

MDBoard CertifiedPlastic Surgery Specialist

Board-certified Plastic & Aesthetic Surgery specialist with 20+ years of experience. Specializes in deep plane facelift at Merkez Prime Hospital, Istanbul. Medical Reviewer for DeepPlane.com.

Turkish Plastic Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery Association
Last reviewed: April 13, 2026
View full profileOur review process
Was this page helpful?