Quick answer: The most common hair-loss myths in India are that only men go bald, that wearing caps or helmets causes baldness, that frequent washing causes hair fall, that cutting hair makes it grow thicker, that oiling regrows lost hair, and that hair loss is purely genetic and untreatable. None hold up — and believing them delays treatment that actually works.
Hair-loss advice spreads fast and is often wrong. Here are six myths we hear daily at Mister Hair, and what’s actually true.
- Myth: Only men go bald. Hair loss affects a large share of women too — through pattern loss, PCOS, thyroid issues, postpartum changes and iron deficiency. It often looks like diffuse thinning rather than a receding hairline.
- Myth: Caps and helmets cause baldness. Headwear doesn’t cause pattern hair loss. Genetics and hormones do. A dirty cap may irritate the scalp, but it isn’t shrinking your follicles.
- Myth: Washing your hair often causes hair fall. The hairs you see while washing were already in the shedding phase. Regular cleansing keeps the scalp healthy; skipping washes doesn’t save hair.
- Myth: Cutting or shaving makes hair grow back thicker. Haircuts don’t change the follicle. New growth can feel coarser because of the blunt tip, but density and thickness are unchanged.
- Myth: Oiling regrows lost hair. Oiling can condition the scalp and reduce breakage, but it cannot regrow hair from a follicle that’s miniaturising due to DHT. It’s care, not a cure.
- Myth: Hair loss is purely genetic and can’t be treated. Genetics load the gun, but deficiencies, thyroid, stress and scalp health pull the trigger — and most of those are treatable. A root-cause analysis finds what’s actually driving it.
Frequently asked questions
Does stress really cause hair loss?
Yes — significant physical or emotional stress can trigger telogen effluvium, a temporary heavy shedding that usually recovers once the trigger passes.
What’s the most reliable way to know my real cause?
A root-cause analysis combining blood markers and a scalp exam. Book one at misterhair.in/hairtest.
→ Separate myth from cause: book a hair test
Medically reviewed by Dr. Saranya Thulasidoss, MBBS, MCh (Plastic Surgery), Clinical Lead, Mister Hair. Last updated 2026.
Related guides
- 10 Real Reasons You’re Losing Hair
- 9 Hair-Loss Treatments That Actually Work in 2026
- Women’s Hair Loss: 7 Causes Doctors See Most Often
