Shaving is one of the biggest hesitations people have about a hair transplant — especially anyone who cannot take two weeks of visible recovery. The short answer: you usually need to shave at least part of your head, but not always, and an unshaven option exists. Here is how it actually works.
Do you have to shave your head?
For a standard hair transplant, yes — the donor area at the back and sides is shaved short so the surgeon can extract grafts cleanly. Whether the recipient (transplant) area is shaved depends on the technique. A full shave is common, but partial and unshaven options mean a fully shaved head is not always necessary.
The three shaving options
Fully shaved
Both the donor and recipient areas are shaved to a few millimetres. This is the standard approach: it gives the surgeon the clearest working field, the most efficient session, and usually the lowest price. It is the typical choice for larger procedures.
Partially shaved
The donor area is shaved but kept hidden under longer hair above it, while the recipient area is trimmed only minimally. Your existing longer hair covers the shaved donor strip within days. It is a practical middle ground for moderate procedures.
Unshaven
Neither area is fully shaved — grafts are extracted and placed between and through your existing hair. This is possible mainly for smaller sessions and hairline work; it is slower and more demanding for the surgeon, and usually more expensive. Our unshaven hair transplant page explains who it suits.
Why clinics usually recommend shaving
Shaving is not only about convenience for the clinic — it genuinely improves the surgery. A shaved field lets the surgeon see angles and spacing clearly, extract and place grafts faster (which keeps grafts out of the body for less time), and achieve higher density. For a large transplant, shaving often produces the better result.
Can you get an unshaven hair transplant?
Yes — for the right case. Unshaven and partially shaven transplants suit smaller sessions, hairline reinforcement, and patients who genuinely cannot have visible recovery. They are not ideal for high graft counts: working through existing hair is slower, can limit density and costs more. Whether it is an option for you depends on your graft number and goals, and a surgeon decides that at consultation.
How long until the shave grows back?
A shaved head after a hair transplant looks like a short buzz cut, not bald. For most people it grows back to a discreet length within two to three weeks — the same window in which the transplanted area scabs and sheds. Planning three to four weeks before any event where you would rather not explain a fresh haircut is sensible.
Frequently asked questions
Can you have a hair transplant without shaving your head?
Yes, with an unshaven or partially shaven technique — but mainly for smaller procedures and hairline work. The donor area almost always needs at least a hidden trimmed section. A fully unshaven transplant is not practical for large graft counts, where shaving produces a better, denser result.
Do they shave the donor area or the transplant area?
The donor area at the back and sides is almost always shaved, because the surgeon needs a clear field to extract grafts. The recipient area may be fully shaved, lightly trimmed or left unshaven depending on the technique and the size of the procedure.
Is an unshaven hair transplant as good as a shaven one?
For small sessions and hairlines it can match a shaven procedure. For larger transplants a shaven approach usually gives the surgeon better visibility and allows higher density, so it tends to produce the stronger result. The best option depends on your case, not on avoiding the clippers.
The bottom line
You will usually need to shave at least the donor area for a hair transplant, and a full shave is standard for larger procedures because it genuinely improves the result. But partial and unshaven options exist for smaller cases and for patients who cannot have visible recovery. If shaving is your main worry, raise it early — share your goals with our surgical team and ask what is realistic for your case.