Can wearing hats, helmets or hijabs cause hair loss? A trichologist explains the myth, the real risks like traction alopecia and scalp buildup, and how to protect your hair if you wear headgear daily.
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Can wearing hats, helmets or hijabs cause hair loss Can wearing hats, helmets or hijabs cause hair loss? A trichologist explains the myth, the real risks like traction alopecia and scalp buildup, and ho Monitor developments in Wearing for further updates.
Can wearing hats, helmets or hijabs cause hair loss? A trichologist explains the myth, the real risks like traction alopecia and scalp buildup, and how to protect your hair if you wear headgear daily.
Advertisement Style & Beauty Wearing hats, helmets and hijabs – what’s the real impact on your hair and scalp? Can wearing hats, helmets or hijabs cause hair loss? A trichologist explains the myth, the real risks like traction alopecia and scalp buildup, and how to protect your hair if you wear headgear daily. Can hats cause hair loss? (Photo: iStock) New: You can now listen to articles. This audio is generated by an AI tool. Tan Wei Lin Tan Wei Lin 06 Mar 2026 07:15AM Bookmark Bookmark Share WhatsApp Telegram Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Set CNA as your preferred source on Google Add CNA as a trusted source to help Google better understand and surface our content in search results. Read a summary of this article on FAST. Get bite-sized news via a newcards interface. Give it a try. Click here to return to FAST Tap here to return to FAST FAST You might have heard this before: Wear a hat too often and your hair will start falling out.But is there any truth in this? When you keep your scalp covered for hours, it traps heat and sweat, reduces airflow… surely that can’t be good for your scalp, right?The truth is a little more nuanced. Wearing a hat (or head covering) for long periods doesn’t automatically cause hair loss – but how you wear it, and what’s happening underneath it, can make a real difference to your scalp health. Trichologist Leonica Kei of Leonica K Trichology breaks down what’s myth, what’s real, and what to do if you’re someone who practically lives in caps, helmets or tudung.WILL WEARING A HAT CAUSE HAIR LOSS? (Photo: iStock) For most people, no – not directly.“Hats and headgear do not cause hair loss unless they are excessively tight or create friction at the areas where they are in repeated contact with your head,” Kei explained.Think about the spots that get the most pressure: your hairline, temples, parting, behind the ears, crown – wherever the fabric rubs repeatedly or tension builds up. Over time, constant pulling or rubbing (from tight caps, helmets, or even tudung pins) can weaken the hair and lead to traction alopecia, where strands break along those pressure points.If you’ve ever removed your headgear and noticed soreness at the scalp, flattened sections that feel “tender,” or thinning that seems to follow the outline of where your cap sits – that’s your cue to rethink the fit.Bottom line: It’s not the hat itself. It’s the tightness, friction, and tension over time.BUT IT CAN MESS WITH YOUR SCALPEven if it doesn’t cause hair fall outright, wearing headgear for long hours can create the kind of environment your scalp doesn’t love – especially in hot, humid weather. (Photo: iStock) We’ve all felt it: You take off a cap or hijab after a long day and your scalp feels warm, oily, maybe even itchy. That “stuffy” feeling isn’t in your head – it’s heat, sweat and oil buildup, sitting on the scalp with limited ventilation.Kei shared that prolonged covering can encourage a few things:Sweat and oil buildup can lead to itchiness, clogged follicles and irritation.Fungal overgrowth (especially yeast like Malassezia) can worsen dandruff or seborrheic dermatitis.Inflammation can aggravate existing hair issues like androgenetic alopecia or telogen effluvium (temporary hair loss).Microbiome imbalance occurs when the scalp’s “ecosystem” gets thrown off when it’s constantly hot and occluded.One important myth to clear up: Your scalp doesn’t literally “breathe” the way lungs do. It doesn’t pull oxygen from the air.But Kei put it well: The scalp functions best when it can “breathe” in the everyday sense – meaning it’s in an environment with good airflow and less trapped moisture.WHAT HELPS IF YOU HAVE TO WEAR HEADGEAR OFTEN (Photo: iStock) If hats, helmets or head coverings are part of your daily life (for work, religious reasons, or just personal style), the goal isn’t to panic – it’s to reduce friction, heat and buildup.PICK BREATHABLE FABRICS (YOUR SCALP WILL THANK YOU)If you’re in a humid climate, material matters more than people realise. Go for cotton, linen, straw, mesh, or moisture-wicking fabrics.For tudung/hijab wearers, breathable fabric options can make a noticeable difference in comfort. Avoid polyester or synthetic satin if you’re prone to sweating – they tend to hold heat.GET THE FIT RIGHT (SNUG IS FINE, TIGHT IS NOT)A cap that leaves red marks, feels like it “grips” your scalp, or requires adjusting throughout the day is often too tight. The same goes for head coverings that pull at the hairline or rely on pins that repeatedly tug the same spot.Aim for secure, not restrictive.WASH YOUR HEADGEAR MORE THAN YOU THINK YOU NEED TOHeadgear collects sweat, oil and bacteria quickly – and re-wearing it without washing is like putting yesterday’s workout shirt back on your scalp.If you’re wearing it daily, frequent cleaning isn’t optional – it’s scalp hygiene.GIVE YOUR SCALP SMALL "AIR BREAKS"Even a few minutes helps. If you can take it off briefly during breaks (in a private space, if needed), d