Exercise is one of the most powerful hair health interventions available. Overtraining is one of the most reliable causes of shedding. Here is the line.
Moderate exercise supports hair health through BDNF upregulation, insulin sensitisation, cortisol reduction, scalp circulation improvement, and DHT modulation. Overtraining causes telogen effluvium through cortisol elevation, nutritional depletion, and acute DHT spikes. The same activity that protects follicles in the right dose triggers shedding in excess. Here is where the line sits.
Exercise is one of the most accessible hair health interventions available — improving every modifiable driver of follicle biology simultaneously. Overtraining is one of the most reliable causes of telogen effluvium. The dose determines which one you are doing.
Exercise is underrepresented in most hair loss conversations. The discussion tends toward products, supplements, and pharmaceutical treatments. And yet moderate, consistent physical activity addresses every system this series has mapped as relevant to hair health — simultaneously, for free, with no side effects profile.
BDNF — the growth factor that supports follicle cycling and that depression depletes — is upregulated most reliably by exercise. Insulin sensitivity — the metabolic DHT amplifier we covered yesterday — improves consistently with regular moderate activity. Scalp circulation increases with cardiovascular exercise. Cortisol rhythm normalises with consistent moderate training. The gut microbiome responds positively to regular physical activity.
Then there is the other side. Overtraining causes telogen effluvium through a mechanism biologically indistinguishable from surgical trauma, crash dieting, or acute psychological stress. The same cortisol cascade. The same nutritional depletion. The same synchronised follicle exit two to four months later.
The same activity that protects follicles in the right dose triggers shedding in excess. The dose determines which one you are doing.
The Benefits
Five ways moderate exercise supports follicle biology simultaneously.
Brain-derived neurotrophic factor supports follicle cycling through TAM receptor signalling — the same pathway Gas6 activates. Exercise is the most potent known upregulator of BDNF. With consistent aerobic training, acute BDNF increases translate to elevated baseline levels. Depression depletes BDNF and impairs follicle cycling. Exercise reverses that depletion directly — independent of cortisol reduction or hormonal change. For women in the hair loss-anxiety loop, exercise addresses BDNF depletion from both directions simultaneously.
Regular moderate exercise is one of the most effective interventions for improving insulin sensitivity — reducing fasting insulin, improving HOMA-IR, raising SHBG. A 30-minute moderate cardio session acutely improves insulin sensitivity for 24–48 hours. Consistent training produces chronic structural improvement. For women with PCOS-related hair loss, regular exercise is a first-line intervention — reducing the primary driver of androgen excess, not just the downstream follicle consequence.
Cardiovascular exercise increases systemic blood flow, including in the scalp. Regular aerobic training produces structural improvements in vascular function — increased capillary density, improved endothelial nitric oxide production, better vasodilatory response. Combined with scalp massage, exercise addresses the oxygen delivery chain that HIF-1α monitors from two simultaneous directions — local mechanical stimulation and systemic circulatory improvement.
Moderate consistent exercise normalises the cortisol awakening response and reduces evening and nocturnal cortisol — the same rhythm disruption the circadian research confirmed drives premature telogen entry. Paradoxically, acute exercise produces a temporary cortisol spike — but this spike is followed by a below-baseline cortisol trough in the recovery period. Regular moderate exercise trains the HPA axis to respond proportionately and recover quickly — the opposite of the blunted, chronically elevated pattern that chronic psychological stress produces.
Regular exercise increases gut microbiome diversity — specifically increasing Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium species while reducing pro-inflammatory Firmicutes. The Mendelian randomisation research we covered in May confirmed causal links between specific gut bacteria and androgenetic alopecia. Exercise is improving the microbiome composition that the gut-hair axis research showed matters for hair loss risk — through a mechanism that no scalp product reaches.
The Risk
When exercise causes shedding — and why the timing is always delayed.
Telogen effluvium from overtraining follows the same delayed biology as postpartum shedding, illness-related shedding, and crash diet shedding — the follicle stress event and the visible shedding are separated by two to four months. The shedding that appears in month three or four is caused by what happened in months one or two. This delay is why overtraining-related hair loss is so often misattributed — the person has often stopped the overtraining by the time the shedding peaks, and cannot connect the two events.
Resting heart rate elevation, persistent fatigue, sleep disruption, mood changes, and reduced performance — these are the overtraining signals that also indicate the HPA axis is under chronic stress. If these symptoms are present alongside hair shedding, the training load and recovery adequacy should be the first investigation, not a new supplement protocol.
The nutritional markers most relevant to overtraining hair loss: ferritin (depleted by high training volume — female athletes have higher rates of iron deficiency than sedentary women), zinc (lost through sweat, depleted by intensive training), and protein intake (inadequate protein in high-volume training is a direct keratin synthesis limitation). Test these before assuming the shedding has a different cause.
The practical framework — exercise for hair health.
The dose: 150–300 minutes of moderate aerobic exercise per week — the equivalent of 30–45 minutes, five days per week — produces the maximum hair health benefit with minimal overtraining risk. This is also the dose that produces the greatest insulin sensitivity improvement, BDNF upregulation, and cortisol rhythm normalisation.
The recovery requirement: Adequate protein (1.6–2.0g per kg body weight for active women), maintained ferritin (above 70 ng/mL for hair health — not just the anaemia threshold), sleep 7–9 hours, and consistent daily stress management. Training without these is not restorative exercise — it is cumulative physiological stress.
The morning synergy: Morning exercise — performed at a consistent time — is both a circadian anchor (morning light + movement resets the suprachiasmatic clock) and a cortisol awakening response enhancer. The cortisol spike from morning exercise occurs when cortisol is naturally elevated anyway, normalises quickly, and contributes to the below-baseline afternoon trough that follicles need for recovery. Morning exercise before the scalp ritual is the biological sequence that supports the most hair follicle-relevant cascade.
Thirty minutes. Most days. With adequate recovery.
The botanical complement to the exercise routine.
Exercise improves everything the ritual also improves — from the inside. The ritual supports what exercise creates — from the outside. Both daily. Both consistent. Both addressing the same follicle biology.
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