Foods for Thinning Hair – What Foods Will Make Your Hair Grow Faster?

If you are suffering from the embarrassing problem of thinning hair, it makes sense to try some natural remedies and foods for thinning hair before taking hair loss drugs or strong medications which might cause side effects. For many people, natural foods and remedies work just as well and are kinder to the body. Here are a few natural remedies and foods that will make your hair grow faster you might like to try.

1. Hard Water Can Have Your Hair Looking A Hot, Gray Mess

You’ll be thinking it’s your products, it won’t be. It’s probably the water. During the first month using this method, I kept thinking it was dandruff. But my scalp was clean and clear, it was only on the hair. I wasn’t using any products yet, no clay or hair tea.

Clarifying with an apple cider vinegar rinse saved the day. That’s the good thing about hard water buildup — it’s really easy to remove. ACV is the best, but vinegar can leave hair dry if used too often (I’ve discovered). Adding less helps (1 tablespoon instead of 3), but finding vinegar-free alternatives was a must!

I’ve been keeping a list of food for thinning hair that works, and these alternatives will remove product buildup of ALL types. Play around and see if your hair prefers one more than the others:

  • coconut water
  • aloe vera juice
  • distilled water
  • rose water
  • amla powder and water (add 1 tsp per 8 ounces of water; shake well)
  • catnip tea (add 2 tablespoons catnip to 4 cups of hot water, not boiling; let it cool for 5 to 10 minutes; strain and apply)
  • fresh pineapple juice
  • comfrey root tea (add 2 tablespoons to 4 cups of boiling, hot water. Let cool for 10 minutes; strain, apply. Comfrey root is also an excellent emollient for hair)
  • cucumber spritz (4 thin cucumber slices, 16 ounces distilled water)
  • bentonite clay or rhassoul clay (added to water, aloe vera juice, or coconut water)
  • fresh grapefruit juice
  • honey water
  • dandelion tea
  • lemon water
  • green tea
  • hibiscus hair tea

2. Foods for Thinning Hair — What You Eat Matters

There are quite a few superfoods, or living foods as I call them, that are wonderful for healthy hair, mind, and body. Start paying more attention to what you eat and drink, and how you feel right after. Living foods give you life, literally!

After eating they continue to:

  • give you energy
  • calm your digestive system (no stomach, digestion, or gastrointestinal nonsense)
  • center your thoughts
  • strengthen your intuitive awareness
  • balance your mood

What foods will make your hair grow faster?

The following foods are especially good for overall well-being, healthy skin, and hair growth. They’re best when you can buy them organic:

  1. cucumber
  2. kale
  3. beans (lentils, black, red, garbanzo, and pinto are best)
  4. pineapple
  5. lemon
  6. organic apples
  7. wild blueberries (fresh or frozen, contain more nutrients)
  8. spinach
  9. red, yellow, and orange bell peppers
  10. seeds: flaxseeds, chia seeds, hemp seeds, sesame seeds, and pumpkin seeds
  11. organic strawberries

IF hair loss, breakage, thin hair, lack of hair growth, all forms of alopecia, and ALL other skin conditions are a problem for you, eat and drink less of the following:

  • Refined sugars, white sugar, and its renamed friend cane sugar
  • Remove high fructose corn syrup from your diet completely
  • White foods (bread, cakes, muffins, pasta, all enriched flour-based foods)
  • Hydrogenated oils
  • Diet drinks (can contain artificial sweeteners like aspartame, which works as a neurotoxin in the body; it confuses your immune system, knocks your ph levels out of balance, which can lead to hair loss, thinning, breakage, dryness, and lack of hair growth)
  • Caffeine (this includes coffee and caffeinated teas, drinks, and supplements)
  • Alcohol (yes this includes wine)

These ingredients can cause inflammation, take more energy for the body to digest, and overwhelm the immune system. I’ve seen clients who haven’t experience hair growth in years, to begin noticing growth.

Give your system a chance to recalibrate to its original greatness. You can bring some of these foods and beverages back into your life once the condition has improved or healed completely. But some things DO belong in the dungeon forever. I’m looking at you high fructose corn syrup and hydrogenated oils.

Eating more plant-based meals (fruit, vegetables, nuts, seeds, beans, sprouted grains) is great for your hair AND relieves depression and stress — two healthy hair stealers, amongst other things. Drinking fresh green juice is one way to get a combination of these ingredients at once.

3. Play With Your Food, It’s Great For Your Thinning Hair

Much of what you eat is even better when applied to your hair. Don’t throw away those old bananas…throw them in your blender with some honey and olive oil. Take those avocados and blend them with avocado oil and aloe vera gel — AWESOME!

Use what you have to get started. Most natural recipes will last in your refrigerator from a few days to a few months.

Some of our favorites:

  • avocado deep conditioner
  • banana deep conditioning detangler
  • coconut cream hair mask
  • slippery marshmallow detangling conditioner

4. Scalp Massage & Smoothing Go Hand And Hair

I’ve always done scalp massages, and they’ve always worked. Sometimes I use oils but most of the time I don’t. The water only hair wash method taught me that the smoothing process after the scalp massage is equally as important. How else will I get the sebum all the way down to my luscious ends. Since this is the hair that has been on my head the longest, my ends love the extra love and care. I can also tell if they’re well moisturized, getting a little dry, or fuzzy.

The next time you give yourself a scalp massage, take a moment to run your fingers down the length of your hair like you’re putting on conditioner. Get used to what your hair feels like. You’ll gradually be able to tell by touch, exactly what your hair needs.

5. Recipe for Thinning Hair – Dandelion Hair Tea

Dandelion hair tea helps hair grow faster by stimulating scalp circulation. This helps the body regenerate skin cells, strengthens hair, and soothes an oversensitive scalp.

Ingredients

  • 1 tablespoon (or 1 tea bag) dandelion root
  • 2 tablespoons of flaxseeds
  • 2 1/2 cups of water
  • 5 drops of lemon essential oil (or 1 tsp of lemon juice)
  • 1 tablespoon honey

Instructions

  1. Steep your dandelion root or dandelion root tea bag in 8 ounces of water for 5 to 10 minutes. Strain dandelion root from water if using scoops. Set dandelion tea to the side.
  2. Boil flaxseeds in 2 cups of water for 4 to 5 minutes.
  3. Remove from heat and strain the flaxseeds from the water immediately.
  4. Add honey to hot flaxseed water (consistency should be slippery) and allow the mixture to cool for 10 minutes.
  5. Combine flaxseed water, dandelion tea, & lemon to a 20-ounce bottle.
  6. Shake well to get all of the ingredients happy and blended.
  7. Wash & condition your hair.
  8. Pour tea over your hair for your final rinse.
  9. Let sit for 5 to 10 minutes with a plastic bag or cap on your hair.
  10. Rinse and style!