Do DHT-Blocking Shampoos Actually Help?
Written by the Fix My Hair Editorial Team · Clinician-reviewed by Dr Hisham Band · GMC No. 7550130 · Last reviewed 12 Jun 2026A shampoo cannot reverse hair loss on its own. But the right one does measurably more than clean your hair — if you use it correctly.
Ketoconazole
Best known as an anti-dandruff agent, ketoconazole also has established anti-DHT activity at the scalp. Studies have shown improvements in hair density with regular use, independent of its anti-fungal effect.
Caffeine and contact time
Caffeine penetrates the follicle and stimulates activity — but only while it is actually on your scalp. That is why a 2-minute massage matters far more than the brand on the bottle.
Why not every day
Washing daily strips the natural oils that protect the scalp. Three to four times a week is the sweet spot — enough contact time for the actives, without drying the scalp out. Our Strengthening Shampoo is built around exactly this.
The short answer
DHT-blocking shampoos can play a small supporting role, but they are not a substitute for proven treatments. Used realistically — as an adjunct, not a cure — some have modest evidence behind them. Used as your only strategy against pattern hair loss, they’ll disappoint.
What’s actually in them
Most “DHT-blocking” shampoos rely on a handful of active ingredients:
- Ketoconazole — an antifungal with some evidence for reducing scalp inflammation and possibly mild anti-androgen activity at the scalp.
- Caffeine — lab studies suggest it may stimulate follicles, though real-world shampoo evidence is limited by how briefly it stays on the scalp.
- Saw palmetto — a plant extract marketed as a natural DHT blocker, with weak and inconsistent evidence.
- Biotin, niacin and botanicals — included for scalp and cosmetic benefits more than proven regrowth.
What the evidence really says
The strongest case is for ketoconazole, where some studies suggest a benefit for hair density — likely through reducing inflammation as much as blocking DHT — which is why a 2% ketoconazole shampoo is sometimes recommended as an add-on. Caffeine and saw palmetto have far weaker evidence. Crucially, a shampoo rinses off within minutes, so even a genuinely active ingredient has little contact time compared with a leave-on treatment.
Where they actually fit
Think of a DHT shampoo as scalp maintenance, not core therapy. Used a few times a week alongside finasteride and minoxidil — the treatments with real, consistent evidence — a good shampoo can support a healthy scalp environment. Used instead of them, it leaves the actual driver of your loss untouched.
Realistic expectations
No shampoo will regrow a receded hairline or reverse pattern baldness. At best, the better ones may help maintain the scalp and modestly support other treatments. If a product promises dramatic regrowth from washing alone, that’s a marketing claim, not a clinical one.
Who might benefit?
If you have an irritated, flaky or inflamed scalp alongside thinning, a medicated shampoo (ketoconazole in particular) is a sensible addition. If your goal is to halt or reverse androgenetic loss, the shampoo is the supporting act — a proper diagnosis and evidence-based treatment are the headline.
Common questions
Do DHT-blocking shampoos work? Modestly at best, and mainly as an adjunct — ketoconazole has the most support. None replace finasteride or minoxidil.
How often should I use one? Typically two to three times a week; follow the product’s guidance and leave it on for the recommended time.
Can they cause shedding? No — if anything they’re gentle; significant shedding points to the underlying loss, which needs proper treatment.
Key takeaways
- Ketoconazole has anti-DHT activity at the scalp
- Caffeine works during wash contact time — so massage
- Use 3–4×/week, not daily
- A shampoo supports, it does not replace, treatment
- Technique matters as much as ingredients


