Your hair is frizzy. Damaged. Won’t hold a style. You’ve tried deep conditioning masks. Expensive serums. Keratin treatments. Still looks dull.
Here’s what salon professionals aren’t telling you: Botox hair treatment isn’t actually Botox.
No needles. No toxins. No facial paralysis for your hair. Despite the name, hair Botox is a deep conditioning treatment that uses fillers, proteins, and amino acids to repair damaged hair fiber from the inside out.
It smooths frizz. Adds shine. Repairs damage. Makes hair manageable. Results last 2-4 months.
But it’s not for everyone. Some hair types react poorly. Some conditions make it risky. And if done wrong, it can damage hair worse than before.
This guide explains what Botox hair treatment actually is, real benefits backed by trichology research, the step-by-step procedure, costs in India, who should avoid it, and realistic expectations you need before booking.
No salon marketing hype. Just honest information about whether this treatment makes sense for your specific hair concerns.
What Is Botox Hair Treatment?
Deep conditioning treatment that penetrates hair cuticle to repair damage from within. Uses blend of proteins, amino acids, vitamins, and conditioning agents.
Named “Botox” as marketing term. No actual botulinum toxin. No injections. Misleading name that confuses consumers but stuck in beauty industry.
Key Ingredients
- Hydrolyzed Keratin – Protein that fills damaged areas in hair shaft. Strengthens hair structure.
- Collagen – Adds elasticity. Prevents breakage. Makes hair flexible rather than brittle.
- Amino Acids (Cysteine, Arginine) – Building blocks of hair protein. Repair damaged bonds.
- Vitamin E – Antioxidant that protects from environmental damage.
- Vitamin B5 (Panthenol) – Penetrates hair shaft. Retains moisture. Adds shine.
- Natural Oils (Argan, Jojoba, Coconut) – Seal cuticle. Lock in treatment benefits.
- Hyaluronic Acid – Attracts moisture. Keeps hair hydrated for weeks.
How It Differs from Other Treatments
vs Keratin Treatment – Keratin uses formaldehyde (or formaldehyde-releasing chemicals) to straighten hair. Changes hair structure permanently. Botox repairs without chemical restructuring.
vs Deep Conditioning – Regular conditioners coat hair surface. Botox penetrates cuticle to repair internal damage.
vs Protein Treatment – Standard protein treatments add one type of protein. Botox combines multiple proteins, amino acids, vitamins in single formula.
vs Smoothing Treatment – Smoothing relies on silicones for temporary coating. Botox actually repairs damage rather than masking it.
Benefits of Botox Hair Treatment
Repairs Damaged Hair
Biggest benefit. Fills gaps in damaged hair cuticle. Heat styling, chemical treatments, sun exposure—all create microscopic holes in hair fiber. Botox ingredients penetrate these damaged areas and repair from inside.
Particularly effective for chemically damaged hair. Color-treated, bleached, permed, relaxed hair all benefit significantly.
Reduces Frizz
Frizz happens when hair cuticle is raised and rough. Moisture enters, causing swelling. Botox smooths cuticle layer. Creates protective seal. Prevents moisture absorption that causes frizz.
Results especially noticeable in humid climates like Chennai, Mumbai, Kolkata during monsoon season.
Adds Intense Shine
Damaged hair looks dull because rough cuticle scatters light. Smooth cuticle reflects light uniformly. Botox treatment smooths cuticle, creating mirror-like surface.
Results in glossy, salon-fresh appearance. Shine lasts 6-8 weeks before gradual fading.
Increases Volume
Seems contradictory—how does smoothing treatment add volume? Here’s how: damaged, limp hair collapses flat. Repaired, strengthened hair has structure to stand up.
Botox strengthens hair fiber. Adds body. Creates fuller appearance without weighing hair down like heavy conditioners.
Makes Hair Manageable
Tangled, unruly hair becomes easier to style. Detangling time reduces significantly. Blow-drying faster. Straightening or curling requires less heat.
Daily styling becomes 40-50% faster for most people. Significant time-saver for busy professionals.
Split End Prevention
Won’t repair existing split ends—nothing can reattach split hair fiber. But prevents new splits from forming by strengthening hair structure.
Regular Botox treatments (every 3-4 months) significantly reduce split end formation. Allows growing longer, healthier hair.
Color Protection
Creates protective layer over hair cuticle. Seals in hair color molecules. Prevents premature fading from washing, sun exposure, heat styling.
Color-treated hair maintains vibrancy 30-40% longer. Reduces need for frequent color touch-ups.
Heat Protection
Doesn’t replace heat protectant spray. But strengthened, sealed hair withstands heat damage better. Less breakage from blow-dryers, straighteners, curling irons.
Particularly beneficial for people who style daily.
The Botox Hair Treatment Procedure
Knowing what happens reduces anxiety and helps achieve better results.
Step 1: Consultation and Hair Assessment
- Hair Type Analysis – Stylist examines hair texture, porosity, damage level. Determines if Botox appropriate or if different treatment better suited.
- Damage Assessment – Checks for severe damage, chemical burns, excessive breakage. Heavily damaged hair may need repair before Botox.
- Allergy Check – Reviews ingredients. Identifies potential allergens. Patch test recommended for sensitive scalps.
- Expectation Discussion – Explains realistic results based on current hair condition. Sets appropriate expectations.
Step 2: Deep Cleansing Shampoo
- Purpose – Opens hair cuticle. Removes buildup, oils, product residue. Creates clean surface for treatment penetration.
- Product Used – Clarifying or alkaline shampoo. More stripping than regular shampoo. Can feel rough but necessary for treatment effectiveness.
- Process – Hair shampooed 2-3 times. Ensures complete cleansing. Slightly rough texture afterward is normal.
Step 3: Towel Drying
- Technique – Hair towel-dried to damp, not dripping wet. Excess water prevents treatment absorption.
- Timing – Takes 5-10 minutes. Hair should be 60-70% dry before treatment application.
Step 4: Botox Treatment Application
- Section Division – Hair divided into 4-8 sections. Ensures even distribution.
- Application Method – Treatment applied section by section. From roots to ends. Heavy coating applied—much more product than regular conditioner.
- Scalp Care – Some formulas applied to scalp. Others only on hair shaft. Depends on specific product and scalp sensitivity.
- Saturation – Every strand must be fully saturated. Insufficient product reduces results significantly.
Step 5: Processing Time
- Duration – 20-60 minutes depending on product formula and hair condition. More damaged hair needs longer processing.
- Heat Application – Most treatments require heat. Thermal cap, steamer, or blow-dryer on low heat. Opens cuticle further for deeper penetration.
- No Rinsing During Processing – Treatment stays in hair. Don’t rinse or disturb during this phase.
Step 6: Rinsing
- Water Temperature – Cool to lukewarm water. Hot water opens cuticle, allowing treatment to wash out.
- Thoroughness – Complete rinsing essential. Product residue makes hair greasy, weighs it down.
- No Shampoo – Just water rinse. Shampoo would strip newly deposited proteins.
Step 7: Blow-Drying and Straightening
- Purpose – Heat seals treatment into hair cuticle. Locks in benefits.
- Technique – Hair blow-dried completely. Then flat iron used on medium-high heat (300-350°F). Each section straightened 2-3 times.
- Importance – This step critical for longevity. Skipping reduces treatment lifespan from months to weeks.
Step 8: Final Rinse (Sometimes Optional)
- Depends on Formula – Some products rinse after heat sealing. Others leave in completely.
- If Rinsed – Cool water only. Very brief rinse. Removes surface residue while leaving internal repair intact.
Total Time Required
Short Hair – 90-120 minutes
Medium Hair – 120-150 minutes
Long/Thick Hair – 150-180 minutes
Botox Hair Treatment Cost in India
Prices vary significantly by city, salon reputation, hair length, and product quality.
Metro Cities (Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai)
- Premium Salons: – Short hair: ₹5,000 – ₹8,000 – Medium hair: ₹6,000 – ₹10,000 – Long hair: ₹8,000 – ₹15,000
- Mid-Range Salons: – Short hair: ₹3,500 – ₹5,500 – Medium hair: ₹4,500 – ₹7,000 – Long hair: ₹6,000 – ₹9,000
- Budget Salons: – Short hair: ₹2,000 – ₹3,500 – Medium hair: ₹2,500 – ₹4,500 – Long hair: ₹3,500 – ₹6,000
Tier-2 Cities (Pune, Jaipur, Ahmedabad, Lucknow)
- Premium Salons: – Short hair: ₹4,000 – ₹6,000 – Medium hair: ₹5,000 – ₹8,000 – Long hair: ₹6,500 – ₹10,000
- Mid-Range Salons: – Short hair: ₹2,500 – ₹4,000 – Medium hair: ₹3,500 – ₹5,500 – Long hair: ₹4,500 – ₹7,000
- Budget Salons: – Short hair: ₹1,500 – ₹2,500 – Medium hair: ₹2,000 – ₹3,500 – Long hair: ₹2,500 – ₹4,500
Factors Affecting Price
- Hair Length – Longer hair requires more product, more time. Price increases 30-50% from short to long.
- Hair Thickness – Very thick hair needs additional product. Can increase cost ₹1,000-2,000.
- Product Brand – International brands (L’Oréal, Wella, Schwarzkopf) cost more than local formulas. Price difference ₹2,000-4,000.
- Salon Location – High-rent areas charge premium. Same service costs 40-60% more in posh neighborhoods.
- Stylist Experience – Senior stylists charge more. Experience reduces damage risk, improves results.
At Home Treatment Kits
- Available Online – ₹800 – ₹3,000 depending on brand and size.
- Pros – Significantly cheaper. Can be done on own schedule.
- Cons – Risk of uneven application. No professional heat sealing. Results last 50-60% as long as salon treatment.
- Recommended – Only for people experienced with hair treatments. First-timers should go to salon.
Investment Worth It?
- Compare alternatives: – Weekly deep conditioning: ₹500-1,000/month = ₹6,000-12,000/year – Keratin treatment: ₹8,000-20,000 every 3-4 months = ₹24,000-60,000/year – Daily serums and leave-ins: ₹1,500-3,000/month = ₹18,000-36,000/year
- Botox treatment: ₹4,000-8,000 every 3 months = ₹16,000-32,000/year
Cost-competitive with alternatives. Better results than daily products. Less chemical exposure than keratin.
Who Should Avoid Botox Hair Treatment?
Not suitable for everyone. Certain hair types and conditions make treatment risky or ineffective.
People with Severe Hair Loss
- Why Avoid – Treatment adds weight to hair. Weak, thinning hair can’t support extra coating. May accelerate hair fall.
- What to Do Instead – Address hair loss first. PRP therapy, minoxidil, finasteride (for men), treating underlying deficiency. Once hair stabilized and growing, Botox becomes option.
- Hair Loss Severity Indicator – Shedding more than 100 hairs daily. Visible scalp showing through. Receding hairline. Widening part.
Pregnant or Nursing Women
- Why Avoid – No safety studies on pregnant/nursing women. Ingredients absorb through scalp into bloodstream. Unknown effects on fetus or breast milk.
- Chemical Exposure Risk – Even formaldehyde-free formulas contain chemicals. Better to avoid during pregnancy/nursing.
- When Safe – Wait until after nursing completely finished. Give body 2-3 months to clear hormones.
People with Scalp Conditions
- Psoriasis – Active plaques on scalp. Treatment irritates. Worsens inflammation.
- Eczema/Dermatitis – Sensitive, inflamed scalp reacts poorly. Can trigger severe itching, burning.
- Open Wounds or Sores – Chemical ingredients sting. Risk of infection. Delayed healing.
- Severe Dandruff – Active fungal infection (Malassezia). Treatment creates moist environment promoting fungal growth.
- What to Do – Treat scalp condition first. Get dermatologist clearance. Once scalp healthy for 4-6 weeks, treatment becomes option.
People with Very Fine, Thin Hair
- Why Problematic – Treatment can weigh down fine hair. Makes it look flat, lifeless.
- Volume Loss – Fine hair already lacks body. Heavy coating removes what little volume exists.
- Better Alternatives – Volumizing treatments. Protein-only treatments without heavy oils. Root-lifting techniques.
- Exception – Fine but damaged hair may benefit if stylist uses lighter formula specifically for fine hair types.
People Allergic to Treatment Ingredients
- Common Allergens – Keratin (protein allergy), coconut oil derivatives, fragrances, preservatives.
- Symptoms – Scalp itching during treatment. Redness. Burning sensation. Swelling. Rash developing hours later.
- Patch Test Essential – Apply small amount behind ear or inner elbow. Wait 48 hours. Any reaction = don’t proceed.
- What to Do if Allergic – Request ingredient list before booking. Identify allergens. Some salons offer hypoallergenic formulas.
People with Very Oily Scalp
- Why Problematic – Botox adds conditioning ingredients. Already-oily scalp becomes greasier.
- Result – Hair looks unwashed day after treatment. Requires daily washing which strips treatment quickly.
- Lifespan Reduced – Treatment lasts 4-6 weeks instead of 3-4 months.
- Better Approach – Clarifying treatments. Protein-only formulas. Skip oil-heavy Botox formulas.
People Who Recently Had Chemical Treatments
- Avoid If You’ve Had – Keratin treatment (wait 4 weeks), hair color (wait 2 weeks), bleach (wait 3-4 weeks), perm/relaxer (wait 6-8 weeks).
- Why Wait – Hair cuticle already stressed. Adding another treatment causes overload. Leads to excessive softness, limpness, or breakage.
- Chemical Overload Signs – Hair feels mushy when wet. Stretches excessively. Breaks easily. Looks gummy.
- Safe Timing – Space chemical treatments 3-4 weeks apart minimum.
People Expecting Permanent Straightening
- Unrealistic Expectation – Botox doesn’t straighten hair. Reduces frizz and adds smoothness but doesn’t change natural curl pattern significantly.
- What to Expect – Curly hair becomes more defined, less frizzy. Not straight. Wavy hair becomes smoother waves. Not pin-straight.
- If You Want Straight Hair – Keratin treatment or Japanese straightening better options. Don’t choose Botox expecting straightening.
Side Effects and Risks
Most people tolerate well. But potential issues exist.
Common, Temporary Side Effects
- Scalp Sensitivity – Mild tingling during treatment. Usually subsides within hours.
- Initial Heaviness – Hair feels weighted down first 2-3 days. Normalizes as excess product washes out.
- Slight Greasiness – Especially at roots. Resolves after 1-2 washes.
- Flat Roots – Loss of volume at roots for first week. Improves as hair adjusts.
Rare But Serious Issues
- Allergic Reaction – Severe itching, burning, swelling. Requires immediate antihistamine. Sometimes corticosteroids.
- Chemical Burns – If product contacts scalp too long or heat too high. Causes pain, blistering, temporary hair loss in affected area.
- Excessive Protein Overload – Hair becomes stiff, straw-like. Breaks easily. Happens when hair already has enough protein but gets more.
- Hair Breakage – From improper application or using on very damaged hair that can’t handle treatment.
Warning Signs to Watch For
- Severe Burning During Treatment – Normal warmth acceptable. Burning pain = remove product immediately.
- Unusual Hair Loss After Treatment – Shedding more than 150 hairs daily. Indicates damage. Stop all treatments. See trichologist.
- Hair Feeling Gummy or Overly Soft – Protein overload. Skip protein treatments for 6-8 weeks.
- Persistent Scalp Itching – Lasting more than 3 days. May indicate allergic reaction or infection.
Aftercare for Long-Lasting Results
Treatment longevity depends heavily on post-treatment care.
First 72 Hours (Critical)
- No Washing – Some formulas require 48-72 hours before first wash. Allows treatment to fully set.
- No Tight Hairstyles – Avoid ponytails, braids, clips. Can create dents or waves.
- No Sweating – Skip gym, hot yoga, heavy exercise. Sweat interferes with setting.
- No Swimming – Chlorine and salt water strip treatment quickly.
- Sleep on Silk – Silk or satin pillowcase reduces friction. Preserves treatment.
Washing Guidelines
- Frequency – Wash every 3-4 days instead of daily. Each wash removes some treatment.
- Shampoo Type – Sulfate-free only. Sulfates strip color and treatment aggressively.
- Water Temperature – Cool to lukewarm. Hot water opens cuticle, allowing treatment to escape.
- Washing Technique – Gentle. Don’t scrub scalp aggressively. Focus on scalp, let shampoo rinse through lengths.
Conditioning
- Still Needed – Botox doesn’t replace regular conditioner. Continue using lightweight conditioner on ends.
- Avoid Protein Conditioners – Hair already protein-rich from Botox. Adding more causes overload.
- Deep Conditioning – Once monthly instead of weekly. Too much moisture softens hair excessively.
Styling Products
- Light Products Only – Heavy oils, creams weigh hair down. Use lightweight serums, mousses.
- Avoid Silicone Buildup – Non-water-soluble silicones create coating requiring clarifying shampoo. Clarifying strips treatment.
- Heat Protectant – Still use before heat styling. Botox provides some protection but not complete.
Heat Styling
- Reduce Frequency – Hair easier to manage. Daily styling less necessary.
- Lower Temperatures – Hair more receptive to styling. Can use 300-320°F instead of 400°F+.
- Less Time Required – Straightening/curling faster. Reduces heat exposure.
Color Treatments
- Wait 2 Weeks – Before coloring hair post-Botox. Allows treatment to fully set.
- Color Lasts Longer – Sealed cuticle retains color better. Extend time between color appointments.
Sun Protection
- UV Damage – Sun breaks down proteins in treatment. Wear hat or use UV protection spray.
- Chlorine and Salt Water – Both strip treatment. Wear swim cap or rinse immediately after swimming.
Maintenance Treatments
- Timing – Repeat every 3-4 months for consistent results.
- Progressive Improvement – Each treatment builds on previous. Hair condition improves over multiple sessions.
Realistic Expectations
Honesty prevents disappointment.
What Botox Hair Treatment Can Do
- Repair Moderate Damage – Chemical damage, heat damage, environmental stress. Restores shine, softness, manageability.
- Reduce Frizz 60-80% – Noticeable improvement. Not complete elimination in very humid weather.
- Add Shine – Mirror-like glossiness. Lasts 4-6 weeks at peak, then gradually fades.
- Improve Texture – Coarse hair becomes softer. Dry hair gains moisture retention.
- Strengthen Hair – Reduces breakage by 30-50%. Makes hair more resilient to styling.
- Last 2-4 Months – With proper care. Gradual fade, not sudden disappearance.
What It Cannot Do
- Repair Severe Damage – Heavily bleached, chemically burned hair may need cutting. Treatment can’t rebuild destroyed structure.
- Straighten Curly Hair – Reduces frizz in curls. Doesn’t change curl pattern to straight.
- Cure Split Ends – Once split, only cutting removes them. Botox prevents new splits, doesn’t fix existing.
- Work on All Hair Types Equally – Best results on chemically treated, damaged hair. Healthy, virgin hair sees minimal improvement.
- Last Forever – Semi-permanent. Fades over time. Requires regular maintenance.
- Replace Haircut – Dead ends still need trimming. Treatment makes hair healthier, not magically longer.
Results Timeline
- Immediately After – Hair very soft, shiny. May feel slightly heavy.
- Week 1 – Peak results. Maximum shine, smoothness, frizz control.
- Weeks 2-6 – Excellent results continue. Hair easy to manage, looks salon-fresh.
- Weeks 7-10 – Gradual fading begins. Still noticeable improvement over pre-treatment.
- Weeks 11-16 – Fading accelerates. Still some residual benefits but approaching need for re-treatment.
- After 4 Months – Most benefits gone. Hair returns to natural state. Time for next treatment.
Botox vs Other Hair Treatments
Understanding differences helps choose right treatment.
Botox vs Keratin Treatment
- Purpose – Botox repairs. Keratin straightens.
- Chemicals – Botox formaldehyde-free. Keratin often contains formaldehyde or releasers.
- Results – Botox maintains natural texture. Keratin alters curl pattern.
- Duration – Botox 2-4 months. Keratin 3-6 months.
- Cost – Botox ₹3,000-8,000. Keratin ₹8,000-20,000.
- Best For – Botox for damaged hair needing repair. Keratin for frizzy, curly hair wanting smoothness.
Botox vs Nanoplastia
- Technology – Both fill damaged areas. Nanoplastia uses nanotechnology for deeper penetration.
- Straightening – Nanoplastia offers more straightening than Botox. Less than keratin.
- Formaldehyde – Both can be formaldehyde-free.
- Duration – Similar, 2-4 months.
- Cost – Nanoplastia typically ₹1,000-2,000 more.
- Best For – Botox for repair. Nanoplastia for repair + mild straightening.
Botox vs Olaplex
- Mechanism – Botox fills damage with proteins. Olaplex rebuilds broken bonds at molecular level.
- Best For – Olaplex superior for bleach damage. Botox better for heat/environmental damage.
- Application – Olaplex can be done at home. Botox best professionally.
- Cost – Olaplex treatment ₹2,000-5,000 in salon. At-home ₹1,500-4,000 for products.
- Duration – Olaplex cumulative effect with multiple treatments. Botox immediate results.
Botox vs Deep Conditioning
- Depth – Botox penetrates deeper. Deep conditioning mostly surface.
- Ingredients – Botox combines proteins, amino acids, vitamins. Conditioning focuses on moisture.
- Duration – Botox lasts months. Conditioning lasts 1-2 weeks.
- Cost – Deep conditioning ₹500-1,500. Botox ₹3,000-8,000.
- Frequency – Conditioning weekly/biweekly. Botox quarterly.
Conclusion
Botox hair treatment offers genuine benefits for damaged, frizzy, chemically-treated hair. Not marketing hype. Real repair through protein, amino acid, and vitamin infusion.
Success requires: – Choosing experienced stylist familiar with formula – Realistic expectations (repair, not transformation) – Appropriate hair type (damaged/chemically treated, not healthy virgin hair) – Strict aftercare compliance – Budget for maintenance every 3-4 months
Cost in India ranges ₹3,000-15,000 depending on city, salon, hair length. Investment worthwhile if hair significantly damaged or constantly frizzy.
Risks exist. Allergic reactions, protein overload, flat roots, temporary greasiness. Minimize by patch testing, choosing reputable salon, following aftercare exactly.
Not everyone should get it. Pregnant women, severe hair loss sufferers, people with scalp conditions, very fine hair, recent chemical treatment recipients—all need alternative solutions or must wait.
For appropriate candidates with damaged hair and realistic expectations—Botox hair treatment effectively restores shine, reduces frizz, improves manageability. Creates healthier-looking hair requiring less daily styling effort.
Research salons thoroughly. View before-after portfolios on similar hair types. Verify product formulas are formaldehyde-free if that concerns you. Ask about stylist experience level.
Schedule consultation before booking treatment. Discuss your specific hair concerns. Get honest assessment whether Botox appropriate or if different treatment better suited.
Budget not just for initial treatment but quarterly maintenance. Results fade. Consistency maintains benefits.
Frequently Asked Questions
- How long does Botox hair treatment last?
Botox hair treatment typically lasts 2-4 months depending on hair type, aftercare, and washing frequency. Chemically damaged hair retains treatment longer than healthy hair. Washing every 3-4 days instead of daily extends longevity by 30-40%. Results fade gradually over time rather than disappearing suddenly. Peak results occur in first 6 weeks. By week 12-16, most benefits have faded. Factors reducing lifespan: daily washing, sulfate shampoos, hot water, chlorine exposure, excessive heat styling without protection. Regular swimmers and daily washers see 6-8 week results instead of 3-4 months.
- Is Botox hair treatment safe during pregnancy?
No, Botox hair treatment is not recommended during pregnancy or nursing. Despite being formaldehyde-free, formulas contain chemical ingredients that absorb through scalp into bloodstream. No safety studies exist on pregnant or nursing women. Unknown effects on fetal development or breast milk composition. Risk not worth potential hair improvement. Safe alternatives during pregnancy: deep conditioning masks, coconut oil treatments, protein-free moisturizing treatments, gentle argan oil serums. Wait until completely finished nursing before scheduling Botox treatment. Give body 2-3 months post-nursing to clear hormones. Many stylists refuse pregnant clients for liability reasons.
- Can Botox hair treatment straighten curly hair?
No, Botox hair treatment does not straighten curly hair. Despite smoothing effects, it doesn’t alter natural curl pattern. Curly hair becomes more defined, less frizzy, shinier—but remains curly. Wavy hair gets smoother waves, not straight strands. The treatment repairs damage and seals cuticle but doesn’t restructure hair bonds like keratin or chemical straightening. If seeking permanent straightening, consider keratin treatment (lasts 3-6 months, uses formaldehyde), Japanese straightening (permanent but harsh), or Brazilian blowout (similar to keratin). Botox best for maintaining natural texture while improving manageability, not changing texture completely.
- What is the cost of Botox hair treatment in India?
Botox hair treatment costs ₹3,000-15,000 in India depending on multiple factors. Metro cities (Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Chennai): ₹5,000-8,000 short hair, ₹6,000-10,000 medium hair, ₹8,000-15,000 long hair at premium salons. Mid-range salons: ₹3,500-7,000. Budget salons: ₹2,000-6,000. Tier-2 cities cost 30-40% less. Hair length significantly impacts price—long hair requires more product and time. International brand formulas (L’Oréal, Wella) cost ₹2,000-4,000 more than local brands. At-home kits available ₹800-3,000 but professional application recommended for first-timers. Quarterly maintenance means annual cost ₹12,000-40,000.
- What are side effects of Botox hair treatment?
Common temporary side effects: scalp sensitivity (mild tingling during treatment), initial heaviness (first 2-3 days), slight greasiness at roots (resolves after 1-2 washes), flat roots losing volume (improves after one week). Rare serious issues: allergic reactions (severe itching, burning, swelling requiring antihistamines), chemical burns (if product left too long or heat too high, causes pain and blistering), protein overload (hair becomes stiff, straw-like, breaks easily), unusual hair loss (shedding 150+ hairs daily indicates damage). Warning signs requiring immediate attention: severe burning during treatment, persistent scalp itching beyond 3 days, hair feeling gummy when wet, excessive breakage. Patch test 48 hours before treatment prevents allergic reactions.