Man washing his hair in the shower showing proper hair washing technique with lather distributed from roots to ends for a complete clean without stripping

How Often Should Men Wash Their Hair? A Barber's Perspective

November 15, 2026

How Often Should Men Wash Their Hair? A Barber's Perspective

The question of how often to wash hair has no universal answer because it depends on hair type, lifestyle, and scalp behavior. What is clear is that most men wash their hair more often than necessary, and some wash it less often than they should. Here is how to figure out the right frequency for you.

What Washing Actually Does

Shampoo removes sebum (the natural oil produced by the scalp), product buildup, sweat, and environmental pollutants from the hair and scalp. The scalp produces sebum continuously; this oil travels down the hair shaft and provides natural conditioning. Washing removes this oil along with everything else. Too much washing removes oil faster than the scalp can replace it, causing dryness, flaking, and sometimes an overproduction response where the scalp produces more oil than normal to compensate. Too infrequent washing allows product, sweat, and environmental buildup to accumulate, which can clog follicles, cause scalp odor, and weigh the hair down.

Frequency by Hair Type

Short straight hair with no product use: every 2 to 3 days is typical. Sweat and oil accumulate faster on short, straight hair because there is less hair shaft to absorb sebum before it reaches the surface. Short hair with product use: wash after each significant product application to prevent buildup, typically every 1 to 2 days. Curly or coily hair: every 3 to 7 days or less frequently. Curly hair is naturally drier because the curl pattern prevents oil from traveling down the shaft; frequent washing exacerbates dryness. Many men with type 3 and 4 hair wash once a week or less. Straight or wavy medium to long hair: every 2 to 3 days, with conditioner used on the mid-lengths and ends to replace moisture.

The Scalp Signal

Your scalp tells you when it needs to be washed. Signs you are washing too infrequently: visible oil accumulation (hair looks wet or stringy without product), scalp odor, or itching from buildup. Signs you are washing too frequently: dry, itchy scalp, flaking that is not dandruff but surface dryness, hair that feels brittle or breaks easily. Adjust frequency based on these signals rather than following a fixed daily schedule.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is daily hair washing bad for men?

It depends on the individual. Some men, particularly those with very oily scalps, physically active lifestyles, or short hair that becomes visibly oily within 24 hours, may genuinely need daily washing. For these men, daily washing with a gentle, sulfate-free shampoo is fine. For men with dry, curly, or coily hair, daily washing is almost always too frequent and will cause dryness and irritation. The key is matching frequency to your scalp's actual behavior rather than following a default assumption. If you currently wash daily and your scalp feels dry or itchy, extend to every other day for two weeks and observe whether the scalp condition improves.

Should men use conditioner?

Yes, consistently underused by men. Conditioner deposits moisture and protein into the hair shaft, reduces breakage from combing and styling, and improves how the hair looks and feels after washing. It is especially important for curly and coily hair types. Apply conditioner from the mid-lengths to the ends (not the scalp for most hair types), leave for 1 to 3 minutes, and rinse thoroughly. For very dry or damaged hair, a leave-in conditioner applied after towel drying provides ongoing moisture between washes. The men who skip conditioner and wonder why their hair is dull, brittle, or frizzy are typically solving the symptom rather than addressing the cause.

Back to Blog