How Often Can You Dye Your Hair Safely?

How Often Can You Dye Your Hair Safely?

Published on September 27, 2024 — 8 min read

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How Often Can Hair be Dyed Without Damage?

As the season changes and fall approaches, we’ve received many questions about changing hair color. How often can you dye your hair color – or maintain one – is a great question to ask when concerned with your color-treated hair health 

Today’s innovations in hair dye technology mean that altering or enhancing your natural hair hues needn’t be inherently damaging, but how often it’s done depends on how it’s done – and how you care for it between salon hair coloring appointments with the right hair wash and maintenance. The good news is that there’s no reason why dyed hair can’t stay in brilliant shape.

1. The Hair Color Methods

How often can you dye your hair safely?

It depends primarily on which method of hair color you and your colorist choose: permanent hair color, semi-permanent hair color, or demi-permanent hair color.
The long and short of permanent vs semi vs demi permanent is this:
Permanent hair color has the greatest potential for hair damage due to the chemistry involved and should be done most cautiously. Ammonia and hydrogen peroxide combine to open up the hair’s cuticle to reach the internal structure and make a color change.

Permanent hair color can either lighten or darken and can last up to 8 weeks, although it may require touching up at the roots as your natural color grows in.

Permanent color is the best way to achieve full coverage of gray hair, and it’s more a matter of growing it out rather than washing it out. It may be used in any coloring process or technique, including single process (bleach-only), double process, highlights, lowlights, and balayage.
If a lot of bleach is involved to considerably lighten your hair, referred to as “lifting,” your hair may be very porous, which means it is prone to moisture loss, fragile, and susceptible to environmental discolorants such as smoke or the cosmetic colorants other hair products may contain.

So how do you take care of bleached hair? In this case, count on waiting at least 4 weeks before you repeat the coloring process to spare your hair from potential damage. The less frequent, the better. Of course, if your hair is very short and you cut it frequently, hair damage is less of a concern.

There are still options for how to get rid of brassy hair if your blonde is turning orangey between hair appointments.
Re-dying the entire length of your hair can be done safely about every 8 weeks, but if you simply want to make a tonal change – warm it up or cool it down – there are less permanent and non-damaging – options.

The frequency of root touch-ups depends on how long you can tolerate seeing your re-growth, and since they are performed on “virgin” hair, frequency is at your discretion. Keep in mind that the average growth rate is a half an inch every month.

Re-dying the entire length of your hair can be done safely about every 8 weeks, but if you simply want to make a tonal change – warm it up or cool it down – there are less permanent – and non-damaging – options such as glazes or toners in the semi-permanent color category (more below).

Demi-permanent hair color is ammonia-free but requires a small amount of peroxide to slightly lift the outer hair cuticle so that the pigment can take hold without lightening your natural color. As long as the hair cuticle is properly restored to its naturally flat and closed position – and you’ve followed the care protocol (more on that below) – you should be able to safely re-color your hair as often every few weeks.
For colorist Julia Elena, how often you can safely use demi-permanent color depends on your hue, even if color is not applied overall:
It is only potentially damaging to blondes achieved with constant bleaching. I recommend waiting up to 3 weeks if necessary for touch-ups, but otherwise, I recommend they let their hair ‘breathe’ until the next full service. Otherwise, demi-permanent color isn’t harsh on brunettes and reds, and since bleach is rarely involved, they can come in often without concern – though it’s not usually necessary.
Stylist and colorist Jennifer Covington-Bowers adds that it depends on what demi-permanent color is used for.
If it’s simply used to blend grays, I say 4 weeks is a good interval. I also use it to give shine and dimension by using it every 6 to 7 weeks, or just about the average time between haircut appointments when I will do both. If I’m using it to correct color, it can be done sooner than 4 weeks after the initial service, but I pay extra attention to keeping the hair healthy throughout the process.
Semi-permanent color can be safely used as often as your wants and whims change – perfect for a weekend fashion fling. This low-maintenance and short-term option is simply a stain or toner that is deposited on the surface and can be removed in as little as one washing if you use an aggressive cleanser, such as a clarifying shampoo, which by itself can be more damaging than the hair dye will ever be.

2. Color Maintenance and Hair Health

Since permanent color is a chemical process that occurs inside the hair fiber, it can break a number of the structural bonds (disulfides) that hold the protein strands together and can leave your color treated hair brittle, porous, and more damage-prone. The more often you color your hair, the more protein you lose, and it can become challenging to comb, style, maintain, and the likelihood of split ends increases.

A couple of tips for dyed hair to stay healthy:

Tip #1: Pick a color-safe washing and conditioning option.

Wash and condition with products designed to do the job safely and gently. New Wash is color-treated hair’s BFF because it contains no damaging detergents that strip your hair of its color. It also conditions while it cleanses, and helps you preserve your natural oils that hair struggles to be healthy without.

Tip #2: Always use a heat protectant.

Adding thermal insult to chemical injury is a recipe for hair disaster. If you’re in the habit of blow-drying or using a curling or straightening iron, please, pretty please, use a product that insulates your strands from the heat and keep it from drying out or worse, getting scorched.

Dressed Up applied to damp hair before the thought of a blow-dryer enters your head is the way to go, as it also adds a soft hold, and supplements some of the moisture you’re sure to lose.

 

Tip #3: Try moisturizing oils.

Pure oils can be effective frizz-fighting salves for dry hair. Covington-Bowers recommends olive oil alone or as a base for almond, amla, black castor, or coconut oil. All have natural properties that penetrate strands to help repair and prevent additional damage.

Just make sure you aren’t allergic first by dabbing a tiny amount on your skin and be watchful for a reaction like redness or itching,” she cautions. “In fact, before trying any new product, test it on a small section of hair first and watch how it responds.

So go forth and color, but keep in mind that all that fun that blondes are purported to have can be spoiled with too much bleach. So stay safe and listen to your colorist: your hair health – and their hard work are always their first concerns.

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Sources:
1. The Science of Hair Coloring. Thought Co. URL.
Accessed October 7, 2020.

2. What is permanent haircolor & is it right for you? 4 popular myths debunked. Redken. URL. Accessed October 7, 2020.

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