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Hair Shedding vs Hair Loss: How to Tell the Difference | Anagen Scalp

Anagen Scalp

12 Dec 2025

Is it normal shedding or true hair loss? Learn how to tell the difference between hair shedding and hair loss, and when to seek professional advice in Singapore.

Hair Shedding vs Hair Loss: How to Tell the Difference Before It Gets Worse

Updated 2025  ·  Anagen Scalp  ·  8 min read



The Difference Between Shedding and Hair Loss

Hair shedding and hair loss are not the same thing — and confusing the two can lead to unnecessary anxiety about normal hair behaviour, or to ignoring genuine early-stage hair loss that warrants attention.


According to the American Academy of Dermatology, losing 50–100 hairs per day is entirely normal as part of the natural hair growth cycle. Each follicle cycles through growth (anagen), transition (catagen), and resting (telogen) phases independently. Shedding is the natural end of each cycle — it is the hairs completing their telogen phase and making way for new growth.


Hair loss, by contrast, refers to a disruption of this cycle: follicles that are miniaturising, producing progressively finer hairs, spending less time in anagen, or failing to regrow hairs that have shed. Hair loss results in a net reduction in hair density over time.


hair shedding vs hair loss

Key Differences at a Glance

 

 

Normal Hair Shedding

Hair Loss

Daily volume

50–100 hairs per day

Significantly more than normal baseline

Duration

Consistent and stable over time

Progressive — getting worse over weeks/months

Pattern

Distributed evenly all over the scalp

Concentrated in specific zones (hairline, crown, parting)

Hair root appearance

White bulb (telogen root) — completed cycle

Thin, depigmented tip — may indicate miniaturisation

Scalp visibility

No change in scalp visibility

Increasing scalp visible in affected areas

Density change

No reduction in overall density

Visible reduction in density over time

New growth

New hairs visible growing back

Regrowth is finer or absent in affected areas

 

How to Tell If Your Shedding Is Normal

Several simple self-assessments can help distinguish normal shedding from early hair loss:


The pull test

Gently grasp a small section of hair (around 40–60 strands) and run your fingers from root to tip with light pressure. Releasing 1–3 hairs is normal. Releasing 6 or more from a single pull suggests elevated shedding that may warrant investigation.


The drain count

Count the hairs in your shower drain after washing. More than 100–150 hairs per wash is a consistent sign of elevated shedding. Note whether this is a temporary increase (post-stress, post-illness) or a persistent pattern.


The mirror test

Compare photographs of your parting and hairline taken 6–12 months apart. A widening parting, more visible scalp at the crown, or a receding hairline are signs of hair loss rather than normal shedding.


The ponytail test

If your ponytail circumference has reduced — the elastic now sits in a different position — this is a practical sign of reduced overall density.

 

When to Seek Professional Assessment

Seek professional assessment if:

•      Daily shedding has noticeably increased and persisted for more than 4–6 weeks

•      You can see your scalp more than before in specific areas — crown, parting, or hairline

•      Your ponytail is thinner than it used to be

•      Shedding is accompanied by scalp symptoms — itching, redness, or tenderness

•      You have had a significant stressor, illness, or hormonal event in the past 3–6 months

 

According to the NHS, sudden or significant hair loss should always be assessed professionally to rule out underlying medical causes. Early identification and treatment always produces better outcomes than waiting until hair loss is visually obvious.


For more on what to look for, read our guide on female hair thinning: early signs and root causes, and telogen effluvium recovery if you have recently experienced a significant stressor.

 

 


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