The first week after a beard transplanting demands patience, and swelling peaks around day three, especially under the eyes. Scabs on each graft shed between day five and day ten. Avoid picking at the scabs. Forcing a scab off before it is ready damages the follicle. If you interrupt the healing cycle, results drop significantly.
By day seven, most patients return to work. The recipient area looks red and slightly bumpy, but a baseball cap hides it well enough. Stitches in the donor strip area come out around day ten. If you had FUE, the donor heals as tiny pink dots that fade within two to three weeks.
What actually happens week by week
- Days 1-3: Mild swelling and some numbness in the chin and upper lip are common. Sleep with your head elevated.
- Days 4-10: Scabs loosen and fall off, and redness remains. No shaving or gym. Sweat traps bacteria.
- Weeks 2-4: The transplanted hairs shed, and this looks alarming. It's not a failure. The root stays alive beneath the skin.
- Weeks 5-12: New growth starts, and initially, these appear as thin, vellus hairs. They thicken over time.
- Months 6-12: Density improves noticeably. Final texture settles between 12 and 18 months.
Around week three, roughly 70 percent of patients call their clinic worried because the new hair fell out. That's the normal shedding phase. The graft enters a dormant phase, then resumes growth. Nothing went wrong.
Common side effects
After 1,000 to 2,000 grafts, swelling is almost universal, and gravity pulls the fluid downward, so the swelling moves. For two to three days, the jawline and neck may feel puffy. Redness lasts longer. Fair skin may show pink for up to three months. Darker skin often shows temporary hyperpigmentation where the needles entered.
Itching is often the most bothersome side effect, and it peaks during scab shedding. Scratching dislodges grafts. Instead of scratching, tap the area or apply a cold compress. About one in ten patients develop ingrown hairs during the first growth cycle. They usually resolve without intervention.
Infection is rare, and clean your hands before touching the site. Use the antibiotic ointment your clinic prescribes. Do not skip it.
Final density is not visible until month twelve. The complete picture takes eighteen months to settle.