Why Is My Hair Always Frizzy?

Why Is My Hair Always Frizzy?

By Mauricio Bellora

Frizz isn't a hair type — it's a condition with a precise, fixable cause. Hairstory co-founder Mauricio Gatto Bellora breaks down the science of lifted cuticle scales, electrostatic charge, and why your shampoo is the real culprit. Understanding the mechanism is the first step to actually solving it.

Published on June 05, 2026 — 12 min read

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Frizz is not a hair type. It is a condition — one with a precise cause, a visible mechanism, and a solution that has nothing to do with the products currently marketed to treat it.

By Mauricio Gatto Bellora, Dr. in Pharmaceutical and Biochemical Sciences | Co-founder, Hairstory

Frizz is one of the most common complaints in hair care and one of the most consistently misunderstood. The products marketed for it — anti-frizz serums, smoothing creams, humidity-resistant sprays — treat it as though it were a permanent characteristic of certain hair types, something to be managed indefinitely with the right combination of products. It is not. Frizz is a condition produced by a specific mechanism, and understanding that mechanism changes everything about how you respond to it.

What Frizz Actually Is

Each hair fiber is surrounded by a cuticle: a layer of overlapping protein scales that lie flat when the fiber is healthy, creating a smooth surface that reflects light evenly and allows adjacent fibers to slide past each other without resistance. When the cuticle scales are lying flat, and the fiber's surface is intact, the hair behaves as a coherent unit. Individual fibers move together, light reflects uniformly, and what we perceive as smooth, defined hair is the result.

Frizz is what happens when the cuticle scales lift. Lifted scales on individual fibers catch on the lifted scales of neighboring fibers, disrupting the coherent movement of the hair mass. Each fiber starts behaving independently rather than as part of a group. The surface becomes irregular, light scatters rather than reflects, and the hair expands outward rather than falling in a defined shape. This is frizz: not a property of the hair, but a property of the cuticle surface.

Humidity does not cause frizz. It reveals it. Hair with intact cuticle scales and an intact sebum film is remarkably resistant to humidity. Hair with lifted scales and a stripped surface absorbs atmospheric moisture unevenly, swells asymmetrically, and produces exactly the expanded, undefined appearance that the anti-frizz category exists to temporarily suppress.

What Lifts the Scales — And the Physics You Can See

The cuticle scales are held flat by the sebum film — the natural lipid layer the scalp produces and distributes along the hair shaft. Sebum fills the microscopic gaps between scales, acts as a lubricant between adjacent fibers, and maintains the surface chemistry that keeps the cuticle in its flat, protective configuration. When the sebum film is intact, the cuticle behaves as it is designed to. When it is removed, the scales lift.

As established in The Surfactant Spectrum, every detergent shampoo — regardless of its marketing positioning, its sulfate-free claim, or its price point — crosses the sebum-stripping threshold with each wash. The foam produced during washing is the visible confirmation that this is happening. A foaming product generates the same surface-tension force that displaces sebum from the hair. The two effects share one cause.

Once the sebum is stripped, the cuticle scales lift. But something else happens simultaneously — something whose effects are immediately visible even if its cause is not: the hair acquires an electrostatic charge.

Here is the physics, stated plainly. Every object carries an electrical charge. When surfaces separate — as hair fibers do constantly during washing, towel drying, and movement — electrons can transfer from one surface to another. The intact sebum film acts as a natural conductor, allowing charge to distribute evenly and dissipate. When sebum is stripped, and the fiber's protein surface is exposed, the hair loses its conducting layer. Charge builds up and stays. Specifically, hair protein at the pH of normal washing conditions acquires a net negative charge.

Like charges repel. Every fiber in the head is now negatively charged, which means each fiber is pushing away from the others. Instead of falling together in coherent groups, they splay outward. Flyaways stand away from the head because they are literally being repelled by the hair beneath them. The hair that seemed manageable before washing becomes impossible to control after — not because water changed it, but because the washing removed the sebum that was keeping the charge balanced. This electrostatic repulsion compounds the mechanical interlocking of lifted cuticle scales: scales catch on each other, charge pushes fibers apart, and the result is the expanded, undefined, resistant-to-everything state that most people simply call frizzy hair.

The hair is now in the exact structural condition that produces frizz. It will stay in that condition until the sebum film is restored — which, in the context of a conventional washing routine, happens partially between washes as the scalp produces new sebum, only to be stripped again at the next wash.

Why Humidity Is a Trigger, Not a Cause

The relationship between frizz and humidity is real but frequently misunderstood. Humid air does not create frizz in hair with an intact cuticle and a healthy sebum film. What it does is expose the vulnerability of hair that has already been structurally compromised.

When cuticle scales are lifted and the sebum film is absent, the cortex — the interior of the hair fiber — is partially exposed to the environment. Keratin protein absorbs water. In high humidity, the cortex absorbs atmospheric moisture through the gaps left by lifted scales, swells unevenly, and produces the expansion and loss of definition characteristic of humid-day frizz. The same hair in low humidity may look controlled — not because the structural problem has resolved, but because the trigger is absent.

This is why anti-frizz products that work in dry conditions often fail in humidity. They are coating a compromised surface, not repairing it. When atmospheric moisture penetrates the coating and reaches the damaged cuticle beneath, the underlying structural problem asserts itself regardless of what was applied on top.

What the Anti-Frizz Category Actually Does

Anti-frizz serums, smoothing treatments, and humidity-resistant sprays work by depositing on the surface — they coat the cuticle with silicones, polymers, or film-forming agents that temporarily smooth lifted scales and reduce the fiber's exposure to atmospheric moisture. The effect is real and often impressive in the short term. The mechanism is cosmetic. It is a typical "Ostrich Strategy": you don't see the root cause of the problem expressing itself, so it does not exist.

The coating does not lower the cuticle scales. It covers them. The sebum film is not restored. The structural condition that produces frizz persists beneath the coating — and the coating itself requires periodic removal, typically with a stronger detergent, which strips away whatever sebum has accumulated since the last wash and resets the damage cycle. The consumer who buys an anti-frizz product to manage the frizz caused by their shampoo is purchasing a corrective response to a problem the shampoo creates. This is the strip-and-restore dynamic described in The Strip-and-Restore Trap, applied specifically to the frizz experience.

The frizz product does not solve frizz. It manages the interval between each recurrence of the conditions that cause it. As long as the cleaning mechanism continues to strip the sebum film, the cuticle scales continue to lift, the charge continues to build, and the structural basis for frizz is renewed with every wash.

What the Right Approach Looks Like

The structural basis for frizz — lifted cuticle scales, absent sebum film, net negative charge on the fiber surface — is not inevitable. It is produced by a specific cleaning mechanism, and it can be avoided by changing that mechanism.

A cleaning system that operates below the sebum-stripping threshold removes surface residue without displacing the sebum film. When the sebum film remains intact after washing, the cuticle scales stay flat, the charge remains balanced, and the fiber surface behaves as designed. Fibers move together. Flyaways lie down. Humidity finds no exposed cortex to penetrate. The structural conditions that produce frizz are simply not created.

The practical signal that a cleansing product is operating below this threshold is the absence of foam. As established in The Surfactant Spectrum, foam is the visible confirmation that a molecule generates sufficient surface-tension force to trap air at the water surface with little thermodynamic effort — the same force that strips sebum. A cleansing product that does not foam is operating below the threshold. The sebum film it leaves intact is the foundation on which everything else — curl definition, frizz resistance, humidity tolerance — depends. New Wash is built on exactly this principle: it cleanses without crossing the sebum-stripping threshold, which means the cuticle stays flat, the charge stays balanced, and frizz loses its structural basis.

The adjustment period some people — mainly those with oily or very oily hair — experience when switching from a detergent-based to a non-detergent cleansing system reflects the time required for the sebum system to recalibrate after repeated stripping. During this period, the hair may feel unfamiliar. What is actually happening is the cuticle scales beginning to lie flat on a surface that is no longer being repeatedly disrupted — and the electrostatic charge that drove the flyaways and the splay beginning to dissipate as the sebum film returns.

Frizz is a condition produced by a mechanism. Addressing the mechanism is the only intervention that resolves the condition rather than managing its symptoms. Everything else is a coating over a problem that the next wash will renew.

About the Author

Mauricio Gatto Bellora holds a doctorate in Pharmaceutical and Biochemical Sciences from the University of Buenos Aires, with a research specialization in microencapsulation. He has served as CEO of multiple global companies across the pharmaceutical, cosmetics, and nutrition sectors, including Allergan Latin America, Natura Cosméticos, and MonaVie. He is a co-founder of Hairstory. Read more from Mauricio.

Next in this series: Article 12 — Why Is My Hair Getting Thinner After 50 and What Can I Actually Do About It? The biology of female hair thinning, what accelerates it, what the evidence supports, and the honest boundary between what can be influenced and what cannot.

Referenced in This Article

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The information in this article is for educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Always consult a board-certified dermatologist or qualified healthcare provider if you have concerns about your hair or scalp health.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What actually causes frizzy hair?
    Frizz is caused by lifted cuticle scales on the hair fiber — not by hair type, humidity, or genetics. When the cuticle scales lift, individual fibers catch on each other, scatter light unevenly, and splay outward rather than moving as a coherent group. The underlying cause of scale-lifting is the removal of the scalp's natural sebum film, which is what holds the cuticle flat.
  • Does humidity cause frizz?
    Humidity triggers frizz but doesn't cause it — it exposes a structural problem that already exists. When the sebum film is stripped and the cuticle scales are lifted, the hair's interior absorbs atmospheric moisture unevenly, causing it to swell and expand. Hair with an intact cuticle and a healthy sebum film is remarkably resistant to humidity.
  • Why does my hair get frizzy after washing it?
    Every detergent shampoo — including sulfate-free formulas — strips the scalp's natural sebum film from the hair shaft during washing. Without that sebum film, the cuticle scales lift and the hair fibers acquire an electrostatic charge. Because like charges repel, the fibers push away from each other instead of falling together, producing the flyaways and expanded, frizzy appearance most people notice after shampooing.
  • What does electrostatic charge have to do with frizzy hair?
    When the sebum film is stripped from the hair, the fiber's protein surface loses its natural conducting layer. Electrical charge builds up on each strand and cannot dissipate — and because all fibers carry the same negative charge, they repel each other. This is why hair that seemed manageable before washing becomes frizzy and full of flyaways after: the washing itself created the electrostatic repulsion.
  • Do anti-frizz serums and smoothing sprays actually fix frizz?
    Anti-frizz products coat the cuticle with silicones or film-forming agents, which temporarily smooth the surface — but they don't lower the lifted scales or restore the sebum film. The structural conditions that cause frizz remain beneath the coating. Because these coatings eventually require removal with a stronger detergent, they reset the same damage cycle that caused the frizz in the first place.
  • What is the role of sebum in preventing frizz?
    Sebum is the scalp's natural lipid layer. It fills the microscopic gaps between cuticle scales, acts as a lubricant between hair fibers, and maintains the surface chemistry that keeps scales flat. When the sebum film is intact, the hair is naturally frizz-resistant, humidity-tolerant, and reflective. When it's stripped — as happens with every detergent wash — the cuticle lifts and the conditions for frizz are created.
  • How does switching to a detergent-free hair wash help with frizz?
    A detergent-free cleansing system like New Wash by Hairstory cleans below the sebum-stripping threshold, removing surface residue without displacing the scalp's natural lipid film. When the sebum film remains intact after washing, the cuticle scales stay flat, electrostatic charge stays balanced, and the structural conditions that produce frizz are never created. The practical signal that a cleanser is working this way: it doesn't foam.
  • Why might hair feel different when first switching from shampoo to a detergent-free cleanser?
    People with oily or very oily hair may notice an adjustment period when switching from a detergent-based to a non-detergent cleansing system. This reflects the time the scalp's sebum production needs to recalibrate after years of repeated stripping. During this period, the cuticle scales are beginning to lie flat on a surface that is no longer being repeatedly disrupted, and the electrostatic charge that drove flyaways is starting to dissipate as the sebum film returns.

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