Quick answer: Do vitamins help against hair loss?
Vitamins only work against hair loss when a deficiency confirmed by a blood test is the cause. The most common hair-relevant shortfalls are iron deficiency (ferritin), vitamin D deficiency and zinc deficiency. With genetic (androgenetic) hair loss, supplements do not touch the underlying mechanism of DHT and predisposition.
Measure first, then take anything: a blood test decides whether vitamins make sense. After a deficiency is corrected, first improvements usually appear after 3 to 6 months, the full picture after 6 to 12 months. Biotin without a deficiency offers no proven benefit and can even skew lab results.
- ✓A blood test decides: measure first, then supplement.
- ✓Most common shortfalls: iron/ferritin, vitamin D, zinc.
- ✓Biotin without a deficiency does nothing and skews lab values.
Summary
- Can vitamins really stop hair loss?
- The most important vitamins and nutrients for your hair
- The biotin myth: why the advertised hair vitamin usually does nothing
- Can supplements even make hair loss worse?
- When and how should you take hair vitamins?
- Spotting a vitamin deficiency: which blood values in hair loss?
- Supplement reality check: what do hair vitamin products actually deliver?
- Diet over pills: the hair plate
- Regrowth timeline: how long does it take after correcting the deficiency?
- Diffuse or genetic? When vitamins do not help
- Frequently asked questions about vitamins for hair loss
Can vitamins really stop hair loss?
Vitamins can slow hair loss or bring it to a halt, but only when a confirmed nutrient deficiency is the cause. In healthy people without a shortfall, the review by Almohanna et al. (2019, Dermatol Ther) found no proven benefit. There, micronutrients are described as a modifiable risk factor, not a cure-all.
The reason lies in the hair cycle. Every hair runs through a growth phase (anagen, 2 to 7 years), a short transition phase (catagen, 2 to 3 weeks) and a resting phase (telogen, around 3 months), at the end of which it sheds.
Inside the follicle, keratinocytes divide very rapidly, one of the most metabolically active cell types in the body. When building blocks such as iron, zinc or B vitamins are missing, the body pushes follicles prematurely into the telogen phase. The result is diffuse hair loss across the whole scalp, which typically only becomes visible 2 to 4 months after the trigger.

This so-called telogen effluvium is reversible once the cause is fixed. The current systematic review by Wang et al. (2024, Mol Nutr Food Res) reaches a clear conclusion, though: without an accompanying deficiency, the evidence for a benefit from supplements is inconsistent. The decisive step therefore remains the blood test, not reaching for the pill bottle.
The most important vitamins and nutrients for your hair
For hair loss, iron, vitamin D and zinc matter most, alongside biotin, vitamin B12, folate, vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin E, selenium, omega-3 and protein. Each of these nutrients has a clear role in the follicle, a typical deficiency sign in the hair and a daily requirement defined by the German Nutrition Society (DGE). The evidence check below ranks the most important ones first, then the matrix sums up all twelve at a glance.
| Nutrient | Role for the hair | Deficiency sign in the hair | Daily requirement (DGE) | Top foods |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iron (ferritin) | Cofactor of DNA synthesis in the follicle; the body prioritizes blood over hair | Diffuse thinning, >100 hairs/day, dull shine | Women 16 mg, men 11 mg (DGE 2024) | Beef liver (15 mg/100 g), lentils, pumpkin seeds |
| Vitamin D | Steers follicle reactivation via the VDR receptor | Diffuse thinning, slowed growth | 20 µg/day (800 IU) | Wild salmon, herring, egg yolk (sunlight is the main source) |
| Zinc | Cofactor for >300 enzymes, keratin and sebaceous gland function | Dull hair, diffuse thinning | Men about 14 mg, women about 8 mg | Oysters, beef, pumpkin seeds |
| Biotin (B7) | Cofactor for keratin formation; requirement very low | Brittle hair (deficiency extremely rare) | 40 µg/day | Liver, cooked eggs, mushrooms |
| Vitamin B12 | DNA synthesis and cell division in the follicle | Diffuse thinning, often with anemia | 4 µg/day | Liver, mackerel, Gouda |
| Folate (B9) | Cofactor for cell division and blood formation | Diffuse hair loss, brittle nails | 300 µg folate equivalents | Liver, kale, lentils |
| Vitamin A | Regulates epithelial cells; excess is harmful | Both deficiency AND overdose cause hair loss | Women 700 µg, men 850 µg (UL 3,000 µg) | Carrots, sweet potatoes (beta-carotene, safe) |
| Vitamin C | Collagen synthesis, improves iron absorption | Corkscrew hairs in scurvy, hair breakage | Women 95 mg, men 110 mg | Bell peppers, broccoli, citrus fruits |
| Vitamin E | Antioxidant, protects cell membranes in the follicle | Rare; with deficiency oxidative stress, hair breakage | Women 12 mg, men 15 mg | Sunflower oil, almonds, avocado |
| Selenium | Antioxidant protection, thyroid and keratin function | Both deficiency AND overdose (selenosis) cause hair loss | Women 60 µg, men 70 µg (UL 300 µg) | Brazil nuts (highly variable), tuna, eggs |
| Omega-3 | Membrane building block, anti-inflammatory | Dry, brittle hair, scalp inflammation | 250 mg EPA + DHA/day (EFSA) | Wild salmon, herring, flaxseed |
| Protein | Hair is about 95% the protein keratin | Heavy thinning (up to 300 hairs/day) | 0.8 g/kg body weight (min. 40 to 60 g) | Chicken breast, eggs, lentils |
Daily requirements per reference values of the German Nutrition Society (DGE), as of 2024. UL = tolerable upper intake level (EFSA).
Iron is the most common hair-relevant deficiency in women
Iron is a cofactor of ribonucleotide reductase and therefore indispensable for DNA synthesis in follicle keratinocytes. In a deficiency, the body prioritizes hemoglobin and pushes hair follicles early into the resting phase. Women of childbearing age are particularly often undersupplied, according to the DGE and the German National Nutrition Survey II.

Rushton (2002, Int J Dermatol) found a markedly lower ferritin in women with chronic telogen effluvium than in controls. What matters is the storage value ferritin, not just hemoglobin. In certain phases of life the nutrient requirement shifts especially: after birth (postpartum hair loss) and during menopause, iron and hormone status change, so a targeted blood check is particularly worthwhile here.
Vitamin D is lacking in more than half of those affected
Vitamin D acts through the vitamin D receptor (VDR), which sits in the hair follicle and helps steer the reactivation of new growth cycles. A 2024 meta-analysis (PMC11479915) found a vitamin D deficiency in 50.4% of women with hair loss and 53.5% of patients with telogen effluvium.
The DGE recommends 20 µg per day (800 IU) when no production through the skin takes place. Since diet supplies only 2 to 4 µg and, according to the RKI, around 57 to 60% of the population do not reach the target level, vitamin D is one of the few nutrients where supplementation guided by a blood value is often justified.
Zinc, B12, folate and protein in at-risk groups
Zinc is a cofactor for more than 300 enzymes and needed for keratin formation. A study of 23,975 patients, however, showed only a minimal difference in serum zinc (96 versus 99 µg/dl), which is why routine zinc testing in hair loss is not recommended. Zinc is mainly relevant for vegans and people with malabsorption.
Vitamin B12 and folate drive cell division in the follicle. Vegans almost certainly develop a B12 deficiency without a supplement. Protein is the foundation: hair is about 95% keratin, and severe deficiency states after crash diets or surgery trigger a well-documented telogen effluvium that is reversible once things normalize.
Vitamins A, C, E, selenium and omega-3: benefits and limits
Vitamin C mainly improves iron absorption by reducing Fe3+ to the absorbable form Fe2+. For vitamin E, a small RCT by Beoy et al. (2010) with 38 men on tocotrienols showed 34% more hairs after 8 months, though it needs replication. For omega-3, Ablon (2015) found more anagen hairs in 120 women, but as a multi-ingredient product.
With vitamin A and selenium, caution is the key word. Both cause hair loss in deficiency and in overdose alike. Anyone supplementing here without a target risks exactly the symptom they are trying to fight. Details on this in the section on supplement risks further below.
The biotin myth: why the advertised hair vitamin usually does nothing
Biotin is considered the hair vitamin par excellence, yet for the vast majority of people, biotin supplementation does nothing against hair loss. The reason: a true biotin deficiency is extremely rare on a mixed diet. The average intake in Germany (women 40 µg, men 46 µg) already fully covers the DGE daily requirement of 40 µg.
The DGE puts it plainly: since there is no widespread deficiency in the population, no general recommendation for biotin supplements can be made. Yelich et al. (2024, JCAD) reviewed the evidence. The highest-quality, double-blind placebo-controlled study found no difference between biotin and placebo in hair growth.
FDA warning: biotin distorts important lab values
The US agency FDA explicitly warned in 2019 against biotin supplements because they distort lab values. Many immunoassays use the biotin-streptavidin binding. Ingested biotin competes with it and can make results falsely high or falsely low. Hair-skin-nail products often contain 5 to 20 mg of biotin, 125 to 500 times the daily requirement.
Important: which tests biotin distorts
Affected are, among others, the troponin test (heart attack marker, may appear falsely low; the FDA documented a death from a missed diagnosis), the thyroid values TSH, T3 and T4, as well as hCG, vitamin D and hormone tests. The FDA recommends pausing biotin at least 72 hours before a blood draw and informing both your doctor and the lab.
For hair loss, that means a double problem: high-dose biotin offers no benefit without a deficiency and can at the same time disrupt exactly the diagnostics meant to uncover the true cause. Anyone having blood values checked should stop biotin products beforehand.
Can supplements even make hair loss worse?
Yes, supplements can make hair loss worse when taken without a deficiency and in doses that are too high. Vitamin A and selenium cause hair loss in overdose, and long-term zinc intake without copper balancing can indirectly lead to hair loss via a copper deficiency. The idea that more is always better is simply wrong here.
Vitamin A is fat-soluble and accumulates in the liver. The WHO explicitly lists alopecia as a symptom of hypervitaminosis A. Excess retinol speeds up the follicle cycle and drives hairs prematurely into the telogen phase. The critical combination is retinol supplements, frequent liver consumption and fortified foods above the upper limit of 3,000 µg per day (EFSA). Beta-carotene from plants, by contrast, is safe because the body steers the conversion according to need.
With selenium, the toxic window is narrow: the requirement is 60 to 70 µg, the upper limit 300 µg per day (EFSA). Selenium poisoning (selenosis) often shows diffuse hair loss as its first sign. The most common source is Brazil nuts, which contain 10 to 70 µg per nut depending on origin. Civas et al. (2024, J Cosmet Dermatol) documented a case of hair loss and nail dystrophy caused by a selenium supplement.
Zinc without copper: the underestimated trigger
Long-term zinc supplementation without copper balancing depletes the copper stores. In the intestinal mucosa, zinc induces metallothionein, which binds copper and blocks its absorption. The consequence is a copper deficiency with anemia, and this anemia can in turn trigger hair loss. Several case reports (PMC12286130, PMC10510946) document this mechanism.
Practical consequence: anyone permanently taking more than 15 to 20 mg of zinc per day should add around 1 to 2 mg of copper. Generally, for the fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E and K, it holds that they accumulate in the body and create a cumulative risk in combination products. The rule is: measure first, then supplement.
When and how should you take hair vitamins?
When taking vitamins against hair loss, timing decides the effect, because individual nutrients block or boost one another. Iron does not belong with calcium, coffee or zinc, vitamin D needs fat, and vitamin C is what makes iron truly available. The interaction and timing guide below shows the key combinations at a glance.
| Nutrient | Blocked by | Boosted by | Practical intake |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iron | ✗ Calcium/milk, coffee & black tea (up to 50 to 80% inhibition), high zinc doses, acid blockers | ✓ Vitamin C (100 to 200 mg increase absorption 2- to 3-fold) | On an empty stomach or with orange juice; at least 1 hour apart from coffee/milk |
| Zinc | ✗ High iron doses (competition at the DMT1 transporter) | – | With long-term use >15 to 20 mg: add copper (1 to 2 mg) |
| Vitamin C | – | ✓ acts as an iron booster itself | Take together with plant-based iron |
| Vitamin D (fat-soluble) | ✗ Taking on an empty stomach lowers absorption | ✓ Dietary fat; K2 (MK-7) discussed at higher doses | With a fat-containing meal (breakfast/lunch) |
| Vitamins A, E, K (fat-soluble) | ✗ accumulate, overdose risk (especially A) | ✓ Dietary fat improves absorption | With a meal; do not take A and D in high doses long-term without a doctor |
| Biotin | – | – | Stop at least 72 hours before a blood draw (FDA) |
| Omega-3 | – | – | With blood thinners (>3 g/day) ask your doctor |
✓ boosts absorption | ✗ blocks absorption. Figures for oral intake with a confirmed deficiency.
The practical classic: take an iron tablet with a glass of orange juice instead of with a milky coffee. The breakfast coffee halves iron absorption, the vitamin C boost doubles it. For fat-soluble vitamins the reverse applies: they need fat in the meal but accumulate, and they tolerate no permanent high dose without medical supervision.
Spotting a vitamin deficiency: which blood values in hair loss?
To identify a vitamin deficiency as the cause of hair loss, ferritin, 25-OH vitamin D, a complete blood count and the TSH value are especially useful, supplemented by zinc, B12 (holotranscobalamin) and CRP. Any family doctor can cover these values. You can take the printable checklist below to your appointment.

Blood-value checklist for your doctor’s appointment
To print out or photograph. The target ranges are a rough orientation, not a substitute for a diagnosis. Note: stop biotin products 72 hours before the blood draw.
| ☐ Value | What it shows | Rough orientation |
|---|---|---|
| ☐ Ferritin | Iron stores (better than serum iron) | Lab-normal from 12 to 30 µg/l; a higher range is discussed for the hair (see note) |
| ☐ 25-OH vitamin D | Vitamin D status | Sufficient from 50 nmol/l (20 ng/ml); deficiency below 30 nmol/l |
| ☐ Complete blood count | Anemia, general blood picture | Lab-dependent reference |
| ☐ TSH | Thyroid (often overlooked) | about 0.4 to 4.0 mU/l (lab-dependent) |
| ☐ CRP | Inflammation (falsely raises ferritin) | always together with ferritin |
| ☐ Zinc (optional) | shows only severe deficiencies | about 70 to 120 µg/dl (serum unreliable, whole-blood analysis more meaningful) |
| ☐ B12 / holo-TC | active B12, more sensitive than total B12 | Holo-TC about 37.5 to 188 pmol/l (lab-dependent) |
| ☐ Folate (optional) | cell division, blood formation | lab-dependent reference |
Note on ferritin (YMYL): Guidelines often define an iron deficiency only below 30 µg/l. Part of hair-focused medicine cites target values of about 40 to 70 µg/l for hair growth, some authors such as Rushton (2002) even above 70 µg/l. These higher thresholds are not conclusively established scientifically and are not set down as consensus in the guidelines. Interpreting your values belongs in medical hands.
Two values are particularly tricky. Ferritin is an acute-phase protein and rises falsely high during inflammation, which is why CRP should always be measured alongside it. And serum zinc only reflects severe deficiencies, because around 99% of the body’s zinc lies intracellularly. An unremarkable zinc value therefore does not reliably rule out a mild deficiency.
Supplement reality check: what do hair vitamin products actually deliver?
Hair vitamin products only deliver something when they correct a deficiency that actually exists. Without a shortfall, no benefit is to be expected. A 2025 systematic review (PMC13063204) found mixed results for oral hair supplements, with often low study quality. The market for such products runs into the billions; the evidence does not keep pace.
Typical combination products contain biotin (often 5 to 10 mg, far above requirement), zinc, selenium, B vitamins and collagen peptides. That makes the assessment difficult: if any component works at all, it remains unclear which one. And with selenium or vitamin A in too high a dose, the product can even cause harm.
One particular trend is hair gummies (often marketed as gummy bears). They are usually significantly overpriced, contain a lot of sugar and are almost always built on the biotin principle in their formulation, which offers no proven benefit without a confirmed deficiency. A pretty gummy changes nothing about this basic rule: what is not missing in your blood cannot be topped up.
Supplements make sense with a blood-confirmed deficiency and for clear at-risk groups: vegans (B12, iron, zinc), pregnant women, older people with malabsorption and people after a severely restricted diet or surgery. For everyone else, the rule is: the money is better spent on a balanced diet than on a capsule taken on a hunch.
Diet over pills: the hair plate
A balanced diet covers almost all hair-relevant nutrients and is superior to supplements in healthy people. A Mediterranean diet of fish, legumes, olive oil and vegetables supplies iron, zinc, omega-3, B vitamins and protein in a balanced way. These are exactly the food groups shown by the hair plate in the infographic below.
The hair plate: eat nutrient-rich
Six hair-relevant nutrients and the best foods for them
Iron
- •Lentils
- •Spinach
- •Red meat
Vitamin D
- •Salmon
- •Herring
- •Egg
Zinc
- •Pumpkin seeds
- •Oysters
- •Beef
Biotin
- •Liver
- •Eggs
- •Nuts
Protein
- •Fish
- •Eggs
- •Legumes
Omega-3
- •Salmon
- •Herring
- •Flaxseed
A balanced mixed diet usually covers these nutrients fully in healthy people.
A few combinations are especially worthwhile. The body absorbs plant-based iron from lentils or spinach far better with a vitamin C source such as bell pepper. Eggs should be eaten cooked rather than raw, because raw egg white contains avidin, which binds biotin. And fish twice a week covers the omega-3 requirement without a capsule.
The most common diet-related triggers for hair loss are crash diets, an abrupt switch to a vegan diet without planning and a very low-protein diet. In all three cases the diffuse hair loss appears with the typical lag of 2 to 4 months and recedes after returning to a balanced diet.
Regrowth timeline: how long does it take after correcting the deficiency?
After a nutrient deficiency is corrected, it takes 3 to 6 months until visible improvements because of the hair cycle, with the full picture setting in after 6 to 12 months. Important to know: in the first weeks the hair often keeps shedding even though the blood values are already normalizing. This phase is normal and no sign that the therapy is failing.
The hair cycle in three phases
Anagen
Growth
2 to 7 years
Catagen
Transition
2 to 3 weeks
Telogen
Rest and shedding
about 3 months
A nutrient deficiency pushes follicles prematurely into the telogen phase, and the hair sheds diffusely.
| Time frame | What happens in the follicle | What you notice |
|---|---|---|
| Month 1 to 2 | Ferritin or vitamin D level normalizes, follicles still resting | Hair loss often still continues, no visible progress |
| Month 3 to 4 | Follicles re-enter the anagen (growth) phase | Shedding slows, first fine baby hairs at the hairline |
| Month 5 to 6 | New hairs grow longer and stronger | Visibly more density, shedding usually back to 50 to 100 hairs/day |
| Month 6 to 12 | Full recovery possible if no further cause exists | Volume approaches the starting state |
Applies to deficiency-related telogen effluvium. If the loss remains unchanged after 6 months of substitution, other causes should be investigated.
Diffuse or genetic? When vitamins do not help
Vitamins help with diffuse, deficiency-related hair loss across the whole scalp, but not with genetic (androgenetic) hair loss. Androgenetic alopecia is by far the most common form and affects around 50% of men over 50 and about 38% of women. The cause is a hereditary increased DHT sensitivity of the follicles, not a nutrient deficiency.
The pattern reveals the form. Nutrient and thyroid causes produce a diffuse hair loss that affects the whole scalp evenly. A receding hairline, a thinning crown or a widening part, by contrast, point to the genetic type. And only this type responds to hair growth agents like minoxidil or to a hair transplant. Frequently both forms occur at the same time.
The authoritative AWMF S3 guideline on androgenetic alopecia (Kanti et al., 2018) lists minoxidil and finasteride as proven therapies, but not nutrient supplements as a primary treatment option, although it does list correcting an existing deficiency as a supportive measure. In women it is also worth looking at hormones and the thyroid.
This is exactly where the value of a medical evaluation as a filter lies: it first clarifies which type is present. The free hair analysis at Elithair is a visual pattern analysis that classifies the distribution pattern and separates genetic from diffuse hair loss. It does not replace a medical blood test for vitamin and nutrient deficiencies, but it helps you judge whether a blood test or a different therapy is the sensible next step.
Frequently asked questions about vitamins for hair loss
Which vitamin is most often lacking in hair loss?
Most often lacking are iron (as ferritin), vitamin D and zinc. According to the RKI, around 57 to 60% of the population do not reach the vitamin D target level, and women of childbearing age are often iron-deficient. A benefit only arises, though, when a deficiency is confirmed in the blood.
Does biotin help against hair loss?
No, only with a true biotin deficiency, which is extremely rare on a normal diet. A double-blind study (Yelich et al. 2024) found no difference from placebo. On top of that, high-dose biotin distorts lab values such as troponin and the thyroid values according to the FDA and should be stopped 72 hours before a blood test.
How long does it take for hair to regrow after correcting the deficiency?
First improvements usually show after 3 to 4 months, a clear recovery after around 6 months and the full picture after 6 to 12 months. In the first weeks the hair often keeps shedding because the hair cycle needs time. That is normal and no sign of a therapy failure.
Can too much vitamin A or zinc cause hair loss?
Yes. An overdose of vitamin A (over 3,000 µg/day retinol, EFSA) drives follicles prematurely into the resting phase; the WHO lists alopecia as a symptom of hypervitaminosis A. Long-term zinc intake without copper balancing can trigger anemia via a copper deficiency and thus indirectly cause hair loss. Both are reversible after stopping.
Vitamin D and hair loss: is there a connection?
Yes, an association is well documented. Studies show a vitamin D deficiency in around half of those affected. The vitamin D receptor sits in the hair follicle. Causal proof is still outstanding, but with a confirmed deficiency, correcting it makes sense.
Is food enough or do I need tablets?
In healthy people a balanced, Mediterranean diet is usually enough. Tablets only make sense with a blood-confirmed deficiency or for at-risk groups such as vegans (B12, iron, zinc), pregnant women or older people. One exception is vitamin D, which diet barely covers and which is often lacking in Germany.
What time of day should I take hair vitamins?
Iron is best on an empty stomach or with vitamin C (orange juice) and at least one hour apart from coffee, tea and milk, which inhibit absorption by up to 50 to 80%. Fat-soluble vitamins like vitamin D belong with a fat-containing meal. Pause biotin 72 hours before a blood test.
Scientific sources
- •Almohanna et al.: “The Role of Vitamins and Minerals in Hair Loss: A Review”, Dermatol Ther, 2019. Source
- •Wang et al.: “Micronutrients and Androgenetic Alopecia: A Systematic Review”, Mol Nutr Food Res, 2024. Source
- •Yelich et al.: “Biotin for Hair Loss: Teasing Out the Evidence”, JCAD, 2024. Source
- •Meta-analysis: “Vitamin D deficiency in non-scarring and scarring alopecias”, 2024 (PMC11479915). Source
- •Civas et al.: “Selenium in the supplement as the probable cause of hair loss and nail dystrophy”, J Cosmet Dermatol, 2024. Source
- •FDA: “Biotin Interference in Troponin Lab Tests”, Safety Communication, 2019. Source
- •StatPearls / NCBI Bookshelf: “Vitamin A Toxicity” (NBK532916). Source
- •German Nutrition Society (DGE): Reference values for vitamins and minerals, as of 2024. Source
Medical disclaimer: This article is for information and does not replace medical advice or a diagnosis.

Dr. Imad Moustafa
Hair transplant specialist