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Nutrition · Protein Science · 5 min read

Hair is made of protein. But eating keratin doesn't help it grow. Here is what actually does.

Hair is almost entirely made of keratin protein. Keratin supplements cannot be absorbed as keratin — the protein is broken down in the gut into its constituent amino acids, which are then used by the follicle to build new keratin from scratch. The follicle needs specific amino acids, in adequate amounts, delivered through the bloodstream. Here is what the 2025-2026 research says about which ones matter most — and how much protein actually supports hair health.

LARITELLE OLENA LARITELLE June 20, 2026 Root Cause
Ingesting keratin does not help hair growth, as the protein cannot be broken down and absorbed. Constituent amino acids, from which the hair follicle can build up keratin, need to be consumed. The cystine-cysteine conversion, the disulfide bond formation, the methionine sulfur — these are the amino acid mechanics that determine whether the follicle has what it needs to build a structurally sound hair shaft.
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The most fundamental fact about hair composition is taught in every introductory biology class: hair is made almost entirely of protein — specifically keratin, a structural protein produced by follicle keratinocytes from amino acids delivered through the bloodstream. This fact is also the source of one of the most widespread and expensive misconceptions in the hair supplement industry.

If hair is made of keratin, and you can buy keratin in a capsule, surely supplementing keratin supports hair growth. Ingesting keratin does not help hair growth, as the protein cannot be broken down and absorbed as keratin. It is digested in the gastrointestinal tract into its constituent amino acids — the same process that happens with any other dietary protein. The follicle does not receive pre-assembled keratin from the gut. It receives amino acids through the bloodstream and builds the keratin itself, from scratch, inside the growing hair matrix.

The supplement that claims to deliver keratin to your hair follicles is delivering amino acids. Any complete protein food source delivers the same thing. What matters is which specific amino acids are available in adequate amounts — and the 2025 and 2026 research has now mapped this with more precision than most hair nutrition discussions reflect.

The Amino Acid Mechanics

What the follicle actually builds keratin from — and which amino acids are rate-limiting.

Hair shaft is composed almost entirely of protein, namely keratin. The protein component of diet is therefore critical for the production of normal healthy hair. The rate of mitosis — the rapid cell division in the hair matrix — is sensitive to the caloric value of the diet, provided mainly by carbohydrates. A sufficient supply of vitamins and trace metals is essential for the biosynthetic and energetic metabolism of the follicle.

But within the protein category, not all amino acids are equally important for keratin specifically. Two stand out:

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Cystine and methionine — the sulfur pair

Cystine and methionine play an especially important role among all amino acids for hair. They contain sulfur, which forms the strong disulfide bonds that give keratin its durability and resilience. Clinical studies demonstrate that when cystine and methionine are available in adequate amounts, hair grows with greater strength, better elasticity, and a healthier growth-to-shedding ratio.

Keratin's exceptional mechanical strength — the property that makes hair able to withstand combing, brushing, heat, and tension — depends on the density of these disulfide bonds. Inadequate cystine availability produces keratin with fewer cross-links, resulting in mechanically weaker hair that breaks more easily. This is shaft structural weakness from nutritional origin, not genetic origin.

There is an important absorption distinction: cysteine is catabolized in the gastrointestinal tract and blood plasma, whereas cystine travels safely through the gastrointestinal tract and blood plasma and is promptly reduced to two cysteine molecules upon cell entry. This is why cystine — the oxidized dimer form — is the relevant dietary form for hair support, not free cysteine.

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L-lysine — the iron absorption amplifier

L-lysine is an essential amino acid involved in the absorption of iron and zinc. The combination of iron supplementation with L-lysine resulted in a significant increase in mean serum ferritin concentration in some women with chronic hair loss who had shown an inadequate response to iron supplementation alone.

This is a clinically important finding that connects the protein and iron articles. A woman taking iron for hair loss who has not achieved ferritin repletion despite consistent supplementation may have inadequate L-lysine as the limiting factor — not inadequate iron dose. L-lysine is found in meat, fish, eggs, and legumes. Plant-based dieters and women eating low protein diets are at risk of both iron and L-lysine insufficiency simultaneously — compounding the ferritin-below-hair-threshold problem the May ferritin article described.

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Protein deprivation — what insufficient intake does to the follicle

Protein deprivation was associated with a reduction in the diameter and pigmentation of hair bulbs — connecting to the grey hair melanocyte stem cell article from earlier this week in an unexpected way: protein insufficiency may reduce hair pigmentation through a nutritional pathway that operates separately from the McSC mobility mechanism the NYU research described. Protein insufficiency shortens the anagen phase, reduces hair fibre diameter, and increases shedding — all classic features of telogen effluvium.

This is not only relevant for frank protein malnutrition. Subclinical protein insufficiency — eating enough protein for general health but not enough to meet the follicle's high biosynthetic demands on top of other bodily needs — can produce the same pattern at lower severity.

1.2-1.6g
Protein per kg body weight per day — 2026 Stanford Medicine updated guidance, raised from the older 0.8g/kg recommendation that most people still use as their target
Cystine
The rate-limiting sulfur amino acid for disulfide bond formation in keratin — cystine (not cysteine) is the bioavailable dietary form that reaches follicle cells intact
L-lysine
Amplifies iron absorption — inadequate L-lysine may explain why some women with hair loss fail to respond to iron supplementation alone despite adequate dose

The 2026 Intake Guidance

How much protein — and from what sources.

Stanford Medicine reported in 2026 that newer dietary guidance discusses 1.2 to 1.6 grams per kilogram per day, which would raise a 150-pound adult's intake from about 55 grams to roughly 80 to 110 grams daily. This is meaningfully higher than the 0.8g/kg recommendation most people have used as their benchmark. Older adults, athletes, pregnant patients, people recovering from illness, and people using GLP-1 medications (covered in the May article) all have higher needs than the baseline.

Food source
Relevant amino acids
Hair-specific value
Eggs
Complete protein — high cystine, methionine, L-lysine, biotin naturally
One of the most complete single foods for hair amino acid support
Fish and poultry
High methionine, L-lysine, complete amino acid profile
L-lysine content supports iron absorption alongside protein supply
Legumes (lentils, chickpeas)
High L-lysine — the amino acid most deficient in grain-based diets
Pair with whole grains for complete amino acid profile; iron content benefits from L-lysine
Seeds (sunflower, pumpkin)
High cystine — important for disulfide bond formation in keratin
Plant-based sources of the sulfur amino acids most relevant to keratin structure
Keratin supplements
Cannot be absorbed as keratin — digested into constituent amino acids
No advantage over whole food protein sources of equivalent amino acid content
The plant-based protein consideration

A plant-based diet can absolutely provide adequate protein for hair health — but it requires deliberate strategy. Variety matters: you do not have to combine every amino acid at the same meal. Over the course of the day, foods such as beans, lentils, tofu, tempeh, quinoa, nuts, seeds, and whole grains can give your body the amino acids it needs. Patients who are vegan and also experiencing hair shedding should be checked for iron, ferritin, vitamin D, B12, zinc, thyroid levels, and protein intake patterns.

The specific risk for plant-based eaters is the cystine-methionine-L-lysine triad — all found at lower concentrations in plant proteins than animal proteins. Without deliberate sourcing (seeds for cystine, legumes for L-lysine, varied plant proteins for methionine), a plant-based diet that appears protein-adequate by quantity may be amino-acid-insufficient by composition for follicle keratin synthesis.

The honest protein-and-hair summary.

Protein is the building material of hair. Insufficient protein — at any severity from frank malnutrition to subclinical inadequacy — produces measurable follicle consequences: reduced fibre diameter, shortened anagen, increased shedding. The updated 2026 guidance of 1.2-1.6g/kg is higher than most people currently target, and the specific amino acids that matter for keratin (cystine, methionine, L-lysine) are not equally distributed across all protein sources.

What keratin supplements cannot do — despite the marketing — is deliver pre-assembled keratin to the follicle. They deliver amino acids. Any complete protein food delivers the same, more cheaply, with broader nutritional benefit. The supplement adds no follicle-level advantage over food that provides the same amino acids.

Eat enough total protein. Source it across complete amino acid profiles. Prioritise cystine, methionine, and L-lysine — the three amino acids most directly relevant to keratin synthesis and iron absorption. Stop paying premium prices for keratin capsules that the gut immediately disassembles into the same amino acids available from eggs, fish, or lentils.

Hair is made of protein.
The follicle builds it from amino acids — not from keratin supplements.

The topical complement to the nutritional foundation.

The daily ritual delivers active botanicals to the follicle environment. The amino acids that build the hair shaft come from the bloodstream. Both are necessary — neither replaces the other.

→ Explore the Fertile Roots Collection
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