Hairstory - Hats and Hair: Does Wearing a Hat Damage Your Hair?

Hairstory - Hats and Hair: Does Wearing a Hat Damage Your Hair?

By Hairstory

Published on September 27, 2024 — 3 min read

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Does wearing a hat damage your hair? Is wearing a hat every day bad for your hair or cause hair loss? How do you avoid hat hair? Whether you’ve thrown on a cap on a bad hair day, worn a wide-brim on vacation to keep rays off your face, or donned a cowboy hat for a festival, you may wonder what it was doing to your hair. With wintertime approaching to make those beanies and berets more appealing, read on to find out what hats do to your hair, how to avoid hat hair, and more.

Does Wearing a Hat Damage Your Hair?
The answer is almost always no. Factors that damage your hair include the kind of hat you're wearing, how often you wear hats, and the environment in which you wear it. Overall, consensus says that wearing hats, whether your worn baseball cap or a new beanie, will not cause hair loss or hair thinning. So are we in the clear to wear hats? Not necessarily. Head coverings themselves won’t cause hair growth issues, but if your hat or scarf is dirty or sweaty, it can impact your scalp and hair health and cause itchiness, oiliness, or lifeless hair.

Is Wearing a Hat Every Day Bad for Your Hair?
Wearing hats that are extremely tight on your head puts you at an increased risk for traction alopecia – a kind of hair loss caused by constant pulling or pressure on your hair. And, as we said above, wearing the same hat or scarf every day without washing it can cause scalp discomfort. However, wearing hats temporarily for protective purposes can actually help with scalp health and care: wearing a wide-brimmed hat on sunny days to protect against harmful UV rays or a winter hat to insulate while outside in the cold are two great examples.

How to Avoid Hat Hair

We know; hat hair is super annoying. Avoiding hat hair starts by using products like Original New Wash to get hair soft, shiny, and healthy so it can bounce back after being bound by a hat. In addition to maintaining healthy, clean hair, choose hats that are loose-fitting or made of soft, breathable material, and style your hair to go with your hat rather than smothering it beneath the fabric. It also helps to have a product on hand with “memory” like Lift Volumizing Spray or our talc-free Powder to prevent squashed hair from laying flat. 

So rest assured that your favorite toppers won’t do lasting damage to your hair – as long as you keep your hats clean and wear them loosely enough, style your headgear however you see fit. And to avoid the hat hair that we all hate, we recommend styling your hair for wear with hats, like textured waves, loose braids, or a messy bun to make creases and bends blend right in.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Does wearing a hat damage your hair?
    In almost all cases, wearing a hat does not damage your hair. The consensus is that hats — whether a baseball cap or a beanie — won't cause hair loss or thinning on their own. That said, a dirty or sweaty hat can affect scalp and hair health, leading to itchiness, oiliness, or lifeless hair, so keeping your headwear clean matters.
  • Can wearing a hat cause hair loss?
    Wearing a hat normally will not cause hair loss. However, hats that are extremely tight can increase your risk of traction alopecia, a form of hair loss caused by constant pulling or pressure on the hair. Choosing loose-fitting hats made from soft, breathable materials helps you avoid this risk.
  • Is wearing a hat every day bad for your hair?
    Daily hat-wearing isn't inherently bad for your hair, but two factors can cause issues: a hat that's too tight can lead to traction alopecia, and wearing the same unwashed hat or scarf repeatedly can irritate the scalp. Rotating clean hats and choosing a comfortable fit lets you wear hats often without harming your hair or scalp.
  • Can wearing a hat actually be good for your hair?
    Yes, hats can support scalp and hair health when worn for protection. A wide-brimmed hat shields your scalp and hair from harmful UV rays on sunny days, and a winter hat insulates your head in cold weather. Used this way, hats act as a protective layer rather than a source of damage.
  • What is traction alopecia and how do hats cause it?
    Traction alopecia is a type of hair loss caused by constant pulling or pressure on the hair. Hats that are extremely tight on the head can contribute to it by creating sustained tension on the hair follicles. To prevent this, choose hats that fit loosely and are made of soft, breathable material.
  • How do you avoid hat hair?
    Avoiding hat hair starts with healthy, clean hair — using a detergent-free cleansing cream like New Wash (Original) helps hair stay soft and bouncy so it recovers from being bound up. From there, pick loose, breathable hats, style your hair intentionally to work with your hat, and keep a memory product like Root Lift or Powder on hand to revive flattened roots once the hat comes off.
  • What hairstyles work best under a hat?
    Hairstyles with built-in texture and movement hide creases and bends the best. Textured waves, loose braids, and a messy bun all blend naturally with the marks a hat can leave behind, making it easier to take your hat off without revealing flattened or dented hair.
  • Which Hairstory products help prevent or fix hat hair?
    Start with New Wash (Original) to keep hair soft, shiny, and resilient so it bounces back after being under a hat. To revive roots and add lift once the hat is off, use a memory product like Root Lift or talc-free Powder to keep squashed hair from laying flat.

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