Suddenly losing more hair than usual — and not knowing why or when it stops.
You notice it in the shower first. Then on your pillow. Then in your brush. Within weeks, what used to be a few strands becomes a visible mass of hair coming out every day — and no obvious cause presents itself. The scalp still looks normal. There are no patches. But the volume feels noticeably less, and the shedding shows no sign of stopping.
This is the experience of telogen effluvium — the second most common form of hair loss seen by dermatologists, and one of the most psychologically distressing. What makes it particularly difficult is its timing: the trigger usually happened months earlier. By the time the shedding starts, the stressful event, illness, crash diet, or hormonal shift that caused it may feel like a distant memory — which makes the connection difficult to identify and the condition feel unexplained.
The good news — and the reason this article exists — is that telogen effluvium follows a predictable biological pattern. Understanding that pattern, and what diet and nutrition can do to support the recovery, puts the timeline in perspective and identifies actionable steps that matter during the regrowth phase.
What is the telogen effluvium recovery timeline?
For most people with acute telogen effluvium, the recovery follows this general pattern:
- 1 Trigger occurs — a physical or emotional stressor pushes an above-normal proportion of follicles into the resting (telogen) phase simultaneously
- 2 2–3 months later — shedding begins; the resting hairs complete their telogen phase and are shed as new hairs push up behind them
- 3 3–6 months after trigger — shedding slows and begins to resolve; new anagen (growth) hairs become visible at the scalp, particularly along the hairline
- 4 12–18 months after trigger — full cosmetic recovery; because hair grows approximately 1 cm per month, visible density restoration takes longer than shedding cessation
Acute telogen effluvium is a benign, self-limiting, non-scarring condition — the scalp is not permanently affected, and full recovery is the expected outcome when the underlying trigger is resolved. Hair growth may take up to 6 months to restart, and even longer for the cosmetic improvement to be apparent. Patience and consistent nutritional support matter more during this period than any single treatment.
Why telogen effluvium happens — and why it looks the way it does
Hair grows in three phases that cycle continuously: anagen (active growth, lasting 2–5 years), catagen (a brief transitional phase of 2–3 weeks), and telogen (resting, lasting 3–4 months). At any given time in a healthy scalp, approximately 85–90% of follicles are in anagen and 10–15% are resting in telogen, shedding roughly 50–100 hairs per day — entirely normal.
Telogen effluvium occurs when a systemic stressor — physical illness, significant surgery, dramatic weight loss, childbirth, a high fever, severe psychological stress, or nutritional deprivation — signals the body to reallocate resources away from non-essential processes. Hair growth is metabolically expensive. The follicle is one of the most rapidly dividing cell structures in the body, requiring a constant supply of protein, trace elements, and energy. When that supply is interrupted, or when the body receives a major stress signal, a disproportionate number of follicles are simultaneously pushed from anagen into telogen.
Because the telogen phase lasts 2–4 months, the shedding does not begin immediately — it is delayed. By the time someone notices the hair loss, the triggering event may have fully resolved. This delay is one of the most clinically significant features of the condition: a careful history taken by a dermatologist looks backward 2–3 months (sometimes up to 6) to identify the cause, which the patient may have already forgotten or not connected to their hair.
What triggers telogen effluvium?
The most commonly identified triggers in dermatology literature include:
Acute vs. chronic telogen effluvium
Acute TE resolves once the trigger is removed and typically self-limits within six months. Chronic telogen effluvium (CTE) is defined as diffuse shedding persisting beyond six months, often in the absence of a clearly identified single trigger. CTE more commonly affects women in middle age and may involve ongoing low-grade nutritional insufficiencies, thyroid irregularities, or cyclical triggers rather than a single discrete event. The recovery timeline for CTE is less predictable and typically requires more thorough clinical evaluation.
What to expect at each stage of telogen effluvium recovery
The following timeline is based on acute telogen effluvium triggered by a single, resolvable event. Timings are from the date of the original trigger, not from the onset of shedding. Individual variation is meaningful — some people progress faster, some slower.
| Phase | Timing from trigger | What to expect |
|---|---|---|
| Silent phase | Months 0–2 | No visible changes; follicles transitioning to telogen |
| Shedding onset | Months 2–3 | Increased shedding; alarming but expected |
| Peak and slowdown | Months 3–6 | Shedding peaks then eases; short new hairs visible |
| Active regrowth | Months 6–12 | Normal shedding restored; new hairs lengthening |
| Full recovery | Months 12–18 | Full cosmetic density restored in most cases |
What you eat during recovery directly affects how quickly and fully hair regrows
Hair follicles are among the most metabolically active structures in the body. They require a consistent, uninterrupted supply of amino acids, micronutrients, and energy to sustain the rapid cell division that drives hair shaft production. When the body enters the anagen (regrowth) phase after telogen effluvium, the nutritional environment it encounters directly shapes the speed and quality of that recovery.
This does not mean that eating specific foods will accelerate recovery beyond the biological rate — hair grows at approximately 1 cm per month regardless of nutritional status within normal ranges. What it does mean is that nutritional deficiencies identified during or around a TE episode may lengthen recovery, reduce regrowth quality, or act as ongoing triggers for continued shedding. Correcting those deficiencies supports the conditions the follicle needs to complete its re-entry into the growth phase.
Protein — the most fundamental requirement
Hair is approximately 95% keratin, a fibrous structural protein. The amino acid building blocks for keratin — particularly L-cysteine, L-methionine, and L-lysine — must be continuously available for the follicle to produce new hair shaft. Protein restriction or inadequate protein intake is one of the most direct dietary triggers for TE, and is the primary nutritional reason crash diets and rapid weight loss so reliably cause diffuse hair shedding.
During recovery, adequate protein intake is non-negotiable. The general guidance from nutrition research is 0.8g per kilogram of body weight per day as a minimum for adults — but for people recovering from significant physical stress or illness, this floor may be higher. Sources that provide the most complete amino acid profiles include eggs, poultry, fish, lean beef, dairy, and legumes combined with whole grains.
Critically: avoid returning to any restrictive eating pattern during the recovery window. Nutritional restriction — even mild — can perpetuate TE or trigger a new episode on top of an existing recovery. If weight management is a goal, this is the wrong time to restrict aggressively.
Iron and ferritin — the most well-studied micronutrient factor
Iron is the micronutrient most consistently identified in TE research. Hair follicle cells divide rapidly and require iron for DNA synthesis and oxygen delivery. When ferritin (the body's iron storage protein) falls below optimal levels, follicle activity is compromised. Some studies suggest ferritin levels below 20 ng/mL may impair hair growth; other researchers propose that levels of 40–70 ng/mL may be needed for optimal follicle function — a threshold many women with TE fall below without presenting with clinical anemia.
Dietary sources of iron include red meat and organ meats (heme iron, most bioavailable), dark leafy greens such as spinach and kale, lentils, beans, fortified cereals, and tofu (non-heme iron). Consuming vitamin C alongside non-heme iron sources significantly enhances absorption. Conversely, tea, coffee, and calcium supplements consumed at the same time as iron-rich meals or iron supplements can inhibit absorption.
A serum ferritin test is the most useful initial lab test for someone recovering from TE. If levels are low, dietary correction combined with iron supplementation (under medical guidance) is the most evidence-supported nutritional intervention for TE recovery.
Zinc — follicle cell repair and protein synthesis
Zinc is involved in more than 300 enzymatic processes, including those governing follicle cell proliferation, protein synthesis, and sebaceous gland activity. A 2016 retrospective study published in the Journal of Drugs in Dermatology found a non-trivial prevalence of zinc deficiency among TE patients, supporting its inclusion in routine nutritional screening. Dietary zinc sources include oysters (highest concentration), beef, pumpkin seeds, lentils, and chickpeas. Zinc supplementation is best approached after confirming deficiency, as excess zinc can paradoxically inhibit iron absorption.
Vitamin D — follicle cycling and the receptor connection
Vitamin D receptors are expressed in hair follicle keratinocytes, and animal studies have shown that vitamin D receptor knockout mice develop alopecia — a signal that the D receptor pathway plays a role in hair follicle cycling independent of its classical role in calcium regulation. A 2024 case-control study in the Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology included vitamin D among the micronutrients measured in 90 female patients with chronic TE, consistent with its established presence in TE workup protocols. Dietary sources include fatty fish, egg yolks, and fortified dairy; sunlight exposure and supplementation are the most practical ways to maintain adequate levels year-round.
B vitamins — metabolism and red blood cell support
Vitamin B12 and folate support red blood cell production and DNA synthesis — both directly relevant to the rapidly dividing cells of the hair follicle matrix. Low B12 levels have been identified as a relevant factor in subsets of TE patients, particularly those following vegan or plant-based diets where B12 is not readily available from food. Biotin (B7) is widely consumed for hair loss, though as discussed in more detail in our biotin and hair loss article, the evidence for biotin supplementation in people without a genuine deficiency is limited. Correcting a documented B12 or folate deficiency is more impactful than high-dose biotin in most cases.
What to avoid during recovery
Several dietary patterns are directly associated with prolonged or recurrent TE and should be avoided during the recovery window:
- Crash diets and very low-calorie eating — among the most reliable triggers for a new TE episode; a caloric deficit sends the same resource-scarcity signal that initiates follicle shedding
- Very low-protein diets — plant-based or restrictive diets that don't account for complete amino acid profiles may leave follicles without the specific building blocks needed for keratin synthesis
- High-mercury fish consumed frequently — some research links heavy metal accumulation to hair loss; the FDA recommends limiting high-mercury fish (swordfish, king mackerel, bigeye tuna) during periods of hair health concern
- High raw egg white consumption — raw egg whites contain avidin, which binds dietary biotin and blocks its absorption; cooked eggs do not carry this risk
Which nutrients matter most — and what the research actually shows
The relationship between nutrition and telogen effluvium is a well-studied but nuanced area of dermatology. Evidence supports addressing deficiencies — not supplementing indiscriminately. The table below reflects the current state of published literature.
| Nutrient | Role in hair follicle | Evidence in TE | Best food sources |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iron (Ferritin) | DNA synthesis, oxygen delivery to follicle cells | Most consistent | Liver, red meat, spinach, lentils, fortified grains |
| Protein / Amino acids | Keratin synthesis (hair is ~95% protein) | Well-established trigger | Eggs, poultry, fish, lean beef, legumes + whole grains |
| Zinc | Follicle cell repair, protein synthesis, sebum regulation | Moderate | Oysters, beef, pumpkin seeds, chickpeas, lentils |
| Vitamin D | Follicle receptor expression, hair cycling regulation | Moderate | Fatty fish, egg yolks, fortified dairy; sunlight exposure |
| Vitamin B12 | Red blood cell formation, DNA synthesis in follicle matrix | Moderate | Meat, fish, dairy, eggs; fortified plant milks for vegans |
| Omega-3 fatty acids | Scalp circulation, follicle membrane integrity, inflammation modulation | Emerging | Salmon, sardines, mackerel, walnuts, flaxseed |
| Biotin (B7) | Keratin cofactor; relevant when genuine deficiency present | Deficiency-specific | Eggs, nuts, seeds, salmon, sweet potato |
Nutritional supplementation works best in TE when it corrects a documented deficiency. The most clinically supported approach is blood testing first — ferritin, vitamin D, B12, and zinc — then targeted correction. Blanket supplementation without testing is less efficient and can create imbalances. Iron and ferritin are the most important starting point for most women with TE.
Common questions about telogen effluvium recovery
Nutritional support for the hair regrowth window
For people in the recovery phase of telogen effluvium who are looking for a structured daily supplement to support the nutritional environment their follicles need, Hair More+ by Tatamoon can be part of a consistent regrowth routine.
Hair More+ is not a treatment for telogen effluvium. It does not address the underlying trigger, and it will not accelerate recovery beyond the biological rate. What it provides is a multi-nutrient foundation — biotin, omega-3 fatty acids, amino acids including L-cysteine and L-methionine, five B vitamins, and botanical adaptogens — that together support the follicle's metabolic needs during the anagen re-entry phase.
Signs that warrant a dermatologist or physician consultation
Many people with acute TE manage their recovery without clinical intervention, particularly when the trigger is obvious and self-resolving. However, the following signs warrant evaluation:
- ⚠️Shedding continues beyond 6 months from the original triggering event without clear sign of slowing
- ⚠️You cannot identify a trigger — unexplained diffuse hair loss warrants bloodwork to rule out thyroid disease, autoimmune conditions, and nutritional deficiencies
- ⚠️Hair loss is accompanied by scalp inflammation, itching, burning, redness, or visible patchy areas — these suggest a different diagnosis
- ⚠️You are experiencing other systemic symptoms alongside hair loss — fatigue, cold intolerance, weight changes, or menstrual irregularity may indicate thyroid dysfunction
- ⚠️No meaningful density improvement is visible by 18 months from the triggering event — full cosmetic recovery should be largely achieved by this point in acute TE
The starting point for any clinical workup is a basic panel covering ferritin, thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), complete blood count, vitamin D, vitamin B12, zinc, and folate. These tests together cover the most common identifiable nutritional and hormonal contributors to diffuse hair shedding and are routinely ordered by dermatologists as part of an initial TE evaluation.
More from Tatamoon on hair health & nutrition
- Malkud S. "Telogen Effluvium: Pathophysiology and Management." Journal of Clinical and Diagnostic Research. 2015;9(9):WE01–WE3.
- Harrison S, Sinclair R. "Telogen effluvium." NIH StatPearls. Updated 2024. NCBI Bookshelf NBK430848.
- Harvard Health Publishing. "Telogen Effluvium." Health A to Z. Updated October 2024.
- Kakpovbia E, Ogbechie-Godec OA, Shapiro J, Lo Sicco KI. "Vitamin and Mineral Deficiencies in Patients With Telogen Effluvium." J Drugs Dermatol. 2016;15(10):1235–1237. PMID 27741341.
- Durusu Turkoglu et al. "Comprehensive investigation of biochemical status in patients with telogen effluvium." J Cosmet Dermatol. 2024;23:4277–4284. doi:10.1111/jocd.16512. PMC11626366.
- Belgaumkar VA et al. "Evaluation of serum ferritin, vitamin B12 and vitamin D levels as biochemical markers of chronic telogen effluvium in women." Int J Res Dermatol. 2021;7(3):407–412.
- Almohanna HM, Ahmed AA, Tsatalis JP, Tosti A. "The Role of Vitamins and Minerals in Hair Loss." Dermatol Ther (Heidelb). 2019;9(1):51–70.
- Medical News Today. "Telogen effluvium: Symptoms, treatment, and recovery." Updated August 2024. medicalnewstoday.com.
* These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. If you are experiencing significant hair loss, consult a board-certified dermatologist or qualified healthcare provider.

