Density returns, without having to explain anything.
Female hair loss doesn't manifest like male hair loss: receding hairlines are rare, what's more common is progressive thinning along the central parting. That's why a different technique, different planning, different sensitivity is needed.
Why a female transplant is a different procedure.
- 01
FUE Sapphire without full shaving
The recipient area is not shaved. Only the donor area is cut short, in a strip covered by hair above. You leave the clinic with the long hair you came in with — no one suspects anything.
- 02
Natural hairline planning
The female frontal hairline is different: rounded, irregular in detail, never perfectly geometric. We design following your features, photos from the past, the structure of your face. No straight male-style edge.
- 03
Combination with PRP
In women, hair loss is often multifactorial (hormonal, stress-related, post-partum). Combining the transplant with PRP (platelet-rich plasma) cycles also protects pre-existing follicles, not just transplanted ones.
- 04
Absolute discretion
Package designed for those who can't afford prolonged absences. Comfortable recovery in a hotel, follow-up via WhatsApp, return to work within 7 – 10 days unnoticed. No published photos, no stories told.
- TYPICAL GRAFTS
2000 – 3500
For frontal hairline coverage and central parting densification.
- PROCEDURE DURATION
6 – 8 HOURS
Local anaesthesia, regular breaks. A single session in most cases.
- SOCIAL RECOVERY
10 DAYS
Without anyone noticing. Long hair above covers any trace.
- FINAL RESULT
12 – 15 MONTHS
Female hair grows more slowly. Patience repaid.
Female alopecia isn't one single thing.
More accurate pre-operative tests are needed compared to a male patient. Hormones, iron, vitamin D, scalp analysis. Without this data, a female transplant is imprudent — and we don't do it without.
- Congenitally high frontal hairline (unchanged over the years)
- Stabilized female pattern hair loss, donor area still dense
- Scars from face-lift, trauma, previous surgeries
- Traction-related thinning (extensions, hairstyles too tight for years)
- Stable Ludwig pattern for at least 24 months
- Active diffuse thinning: the donor itself is involved, not harvestable
- Frontal fibrosing alopecia (LPP-FFA): the scar rejects grafts
- Uninvestigated hormonal imbalance (iron deficiency, thyroid, recent post-partum)
- Under 30 with family history of very aggressive alopecia: pattern not yet stable
An assessment that starts from blood tests.
Before evaluating surgery, we ask for your latest blood work (ferritin, vitamin D, thyroid hormones) and a few scalp photos. If anything is missing, we tell you which tests to do first. The consultation is free.