Am I a Good Candidate for a Hair Transplant?
Written by the Fix My Hair Editorial Team · Clinician-reviewed by Dr Hisham Band · GMC No. 7550130 · Last reviewed 5 Feb 2026The most important question — and one too many clinics answer with a sales pitch rather than an honest assessment.
The three pillars
Good candidacy comes down to donor supply, stable loss, and realistic expectations. Donor supply — the density at the back and sides — is the primary factor, because it’s the finite resource everything is built from.
Age and timing
Under-25s need careful planning: loss is often still accelerating, and donor hair has to last a lifetime.
Why we test first
Medical contraindications exist, and an undiagnosed cause can undermine results. That’s why blood testing comes before any surgical discussion.
What makes a strong candidate
The best outcomes tend to share a few things:
- A healthy donor area — good density at the back and sides to harvest from.
- Stable or controlled loss — a pattern that has settled, or is being held with medication.
- A defined area to treat — a receding hairline or thinning crown, rather than uniform thinning everywhere.
- Realistic expectations — wanting natural improvement, not the hair you had at 18.
- Good general health — no uncontrolled conditions that would affect healing.
When a transplant isn’t the answer — yet
Surgery isn’t right for everyone, and an honest clinic will say so. We’d usually pause if:
- Loss is still rapidly progressing and unstable — operating now risks chasing it.
- Thinning is diffuse across the whole scalp, including the donor, leaving too little to harvest safely.
- The cause is something other than pattern loss — an untreated thyroid issue, low ferritin, or an autoimmune condition like alopecia areata — which surgery won’t fix.
- Expectations can’t realistically be met with the donor available.
In these cases the right first step is diagnosis and medical treatment — not a scalpel.
The donor area is the whole game
Everything a transplant achieves is built from the permanent hair at the back and sides. If that bank is dense, a surgeon has the raw material to create real coverage; if it’s sparse, even flawless technique is limited by supply. Assessing donor density honestly is the single most important part of deciding candidacy — and the part a sales-led clinic is most tempted to gloss over.
Realistic expectations matter
A transplant redistributes hair; it doesn’t manufacture more. The goal is a natural, age-appropriate improvement that still looks right in twenty years — not turning the clock back to a teenage hairline. Patients who are happy with “fuller and natural” rather than “exactly as it was” are almost always the happiest afterwards.
Why we test before we operate
An undiagnosed driver — hormonal, nutritional or autoimmune — can quietly undermine even a technically perfect transplant, because the hair around the grafts keeps thinning. That’s why a blood panel comes before any surgical discussion: it confirms the cause, rules out contraindications and makes the result more predictable.
How we assess you
At consultation we examine your donor density, map the area to be treated, review your medical history and blood results, and talk through what’s realistically achievable. You’ll get a straight answer — including “not yet” or “medication first” when that’s genuinely the better call.
Common questions
Can women have hair transplants? Some can — but female pattern loss is often diffuse, so candidacy is assessed differently. See our guide to female candidacy.
Does a transplant last forever? Transplanted follicles are typically resistant to DHT and tend to be permanent, but you may still lose surrounding native hair — which is why ongoing medication is often advised.
What happens at your assessment
The honest answer to “am I a candidate?” only comes from being seen. At your free consultation we measure your donor density, examine the pattern and quality of your loss, review your medical history and any blood results, and discuss what you actually want to achieve. From that we give you a straight answer: whether surgery suits you, roughly what it would involve, and whether medication should come first or alongside.
It helps to come prepared. Bring any photos showing how your hair has changed over recent years, a list of any medications or supplements you take, and your questions. There’s no pressure to book on the day — a good assessment sometimes ends with “treat medically and reassess”, and that’s a legitimate, money-saving outcome rather than a lost sale.
Key takeaways
- Donor supply is the primary factor
- Loss should be stable
- Under-25 needs careful planning
- Medical contraindications exist
- Blood testing is essential before surgery


