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Hers vs. Happy Head for Hair Loss: How Do They Compare?

Sara Harcharik Perkins, MD

Reviewed by Sara Harcharik Perkins, MD

Written by Vanessa Gibbs

Published 04/04/2025

Thinning hair, a widening part, or increased shedding? Hair loss treatments can help. Hers and Happy Head are two telehealth platforms offering them online.

But which one should you go for? Hers offers a range of over-the-counter (OTC) and prescription hair loss treatments, including pills, chews, serums, and sprays. Happy Head has prescription hair loss treatments in liquid solutions and pills.

Let’s compare Hers versus Happy Head for hair loss to help you decide.

Want the TL;DR version? Here are the key things to know about Hers and Happy Head for women’s hair loss.

Hers
Happy Head
Hair loss products offered
OTC and prescription hair loss treatments, including pills, chews, serums, sprays, and foams
Prescription hair loss treatments, including pills and liquid solutions
Do they work?
Products contain FDA-approved, clinically proven ingredients
Products contain FDA-approved, clinically proven ingredients
How to get treatment
100% online (online consultation needed for prescription treatments)
100% online (online consultation needed — all products require prescription)
Cost
From under $13/bottle for topical treatments. $35 a month for some prescription treatments.
From $22 to $149/month

Let’s start with products. Both Hers and Happy Head offer a range of products to help stop hair loss, renew your hairline, and regrow lost hair. Here’s what you can get from each company.

Hers Hair Loss Products for Women

Hers offers a range of topical and oral hair loss treatments, as well as supplements and hair care products. Some offerings are available over the counter, while others are prescription treatments.

Hers Topical Hair Loss Treatments

Hers topical hair loss treatments include solutions, serums, foams, and sprays.

Topical hair treatments available through Hers:

  • Topical minoxidil. Choose from straight-up minoxidil liquid solution or minoxidil foam.

  • Hair Blends serum. A serum containing minoxidil, biotin, vitamin B5, and ketoconazole.

  • Hair Blends Postmeno serum. A serum with finasteride, minoxidil, and essential oils for women who’ve gone through menopause.

  • Postmenopausal hair loss spray. A spray containing finasteride and minoxidil for women who’ve gone through menopause.

Topical minoxidil is available over the counter, but you’ll need a prescription for the other products. You can get one online (if suitable for you) through Hers.

Hers Oral Hair Loss Treatments

Hers also offers oral treatments for hair loss. These are all prescription treatments.

Your options include:

  • A daily minoxidil pill

  • Hair Vitamins + Minoxidil — a daily pill containing minoxidil, biotin, zinc, and vitamins C, B5, and B6

  • Biotin + Minoxidil chew — a daily lemon-flavored chew containing minoxidil and biotin

Take the free hair quiz to see what Hers products might be best for you.

Hers Supplements and Hair Care Products

You can also get supplements and hair care products through Hers to improve the look and health of your hair.

Those include:

  • Triple Threat shampoo and conditioner. This thickening shampoo and conditioner combo contains saw palmetto, an amino acid blend, argan oil, coconut oil, and sunflower seed oil to help control hair shedding while strengthening and moisturizing your strands.

  • Full Volume shampoo and conditioner. This volumizing shampoo and conditioner duo contains Biovolume 128™, hydrolyzed rice protein, argan oil, caffeine, and biotin to add volume to fine, flat hair. 

  • Build Biotin gummies. A daily biotin gummy that can help support healthy hair and nails.

There’s also a range of products for your scalp and eyelashes if you need them.

Happy Head Hair Loss Products

Happy Head offers topical and oral hair loss treatments alongside supplements and everyday hair care products. It only offers prescription treatments.

Topical Hair Loss Treatments

Happy Head’s topical products come in a liquid solution with a dropper. They contain different combinations of active ingredients, including:

  • Minoxidil

  • Finasteride

  • Dutasteride

  • Latanoprost

  • Spironolactone

  • Retinoic acid

  • Hydrocortisone

The products can be customized to suit your needs (say, by removing an ingredient if you’re allergic to it).

Happy Head Oral Hair Loss Treatments

Happy Head’s oral hair loss treatments include a mix of finasteride, minoxidil, dutasteride, spironolactone, and vitamin D3. You can also get oral minoxidil, finasteride, dutasteride, and spironolactone on their own.

These products come as a daily capsule or pill.

Happy Head Supplements and Hair Care Products

As for supplements and hair care, Happy Head offers a thickening shampoo, thickening conditioner, and hair supplements. The supplements contain biotin, collagen, keratin, saw palmetto, ashwagandha, probiotics, and vitamins A and D to support hair health.

Now for probably the most important question: Do these products actually work? Here’s the science behind the ingredients and the results you might see.

Hers Hair Loss Effectiveness

Hers hair loss treatments use minoxidil and finasteride, both of which are clinically proven to treat hair loss.

Minoxidil

Topical minoxidil (you might know it as Rogaine®) is approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to treat androgenetic alopecia in men and women — better known as male pattern baldness and female pattern hair loss.

It’s sometimes prescribed off-label for other types of hair loss and as a daily pill for hair loss.

Minoxidil works by increasing blood flow to hair follicles and extending the anagen phase (the growth stage) of the hair growth cycle. This helps you grow longer, thicker hair.

Studies show it’s an effective treatment. Minoxidil can prevent hair loss from getting worse, increase hair density, and encourage hair growth.

Learn more about minoxidil in our blog.

Finasteride

Oral finasteride is FDA-approved to treat male pattern baldness, but it’s prescribed off-label for hair loss in women who’ve gone through menopause and in topical formulations.

It works by stopping testosterone from converting into dihydrotestosterone (DHT), a hormone that can cause hair loss. Research shows finasteride can stop hair loss and increase hair thickness.

We’ve covered finasteride in more detail on our blog. 

Hair Growth Supplements

Biotin, zinc, and iron nutritional deficiencies have been linked to hair loss, and your body needs vitamin C to absorb iron. You can find these ingredients in Hers supplements and hair loss treatments to give your body the nutrients it needs to grow healthy hair (and more of it!).

Ketoconazole

You might have seen ketoconazole shampoo before. It’s used to treat fungal infections, including infections of the scalp. A healthy scalp = healthy hair.

Do Hers Hair Loss Treatments Work? 

Customers say so. In a Hers survey, 92 percent of customers said their hair loss improved or stopped progressing within 12 months of treatment through Hers.*

And 85 percent of customers said they’re likely to continue with their hair loss treatment through Hers.**

Happy Head

Happy Head uses minoxidil, finasteride, dutasteride, spironolactone, and latanoprost as its main ingredients. Here’s a little on how those last few work:

  • Dutasteride. This ingredient blocks testosterone from converting into DHT. Research shows dutasteride can increase hair thickness and stop hair loss from progressing.

  • Spironolactone. Spironolactone can reduce sex hormones and the effects of DHT. Studies show it can improve hair loss, especially when combined with other effective hair loss treatments.

  • Latanoprost. This ingredient may help reduce hair loss and increase the total number of hair strands.

  • Hair growth supplements. There’s some science behind ingredients like biotin and saw palmetto for hair growth, which are used in Happy Head’s supplements.

You can purchase hair loss treatments from Hers and Happy Head online. Here’s how.

Hers Hair Loss Process

If you’re going for an OTC product (like topical minoxidil, biotin gummies, and shampoos or conditioners), you can simply add them to your cart. 

For prescription products, you can get a prescription online through Hers, if suitable for you.

Here’s what the process looks like:

  1. Hair quiz and online assessment. Get started with our free hair quiz and online assessment. You’ll answer a few questions about your hair loss symptoms, health, lifestyle, and hair regrowth goals.

  2. Provider assessment. A medical professional will go over your answers and create a treatment plan tailored to you and your hair.

  3. Order treatment. If prescribed, you can order hair loss treatment online. It’s delivered to your door in discreet packaging. Shipping is free.

  4. Ongoing support. You’ll get unlimited ongoing messaging with licensed providers through the Hers app. Get follow-ups, treatment adjustments, help with side effects, and answers to your questions, anytime. You’ll also have access to educational hair loss guides in the Hers app to learn more about what’s happening up top and how to stop it.

Happy Head Process

Happy Head has a similar process.

You can order supplements online as you would any other product. The rest of Happy Head’s products are only available with a prescription, so you’ll need to connect with a healthcare provider before you can purchase them.

You’ll start with an intake questionnaire. A dermatologist will go over your answers and create a customized treatment plan.

If you get a prescription, treatments are delivered to your door and shipping is free. You’ll also get ongoing continuous access to dermatologists for follow-ups, adjustments, and answers to any questions you might have.

What’s this going to cost you? Here’s how the two companies compare on price.

Hers Hair Loss Prices

Some Hers hair loss treatments are available as a one-off purchase or a subscription. You can pause or cancel subscriptions any time.

Prices include:

  • Minoxidil solution and minoxidil foam cost as low as $12.67 a bottle for a six-month subscription.

  • Oral minoxidil is $29 a month.

  • Biotin gummies cost as low as $13.50 a bottle for a six-month subscription.

  • Hair Blends products (Hair Vitamins + Minoxidil, Biotin + Minoxidil chew, Hair Blends serum, and Hair Blends Postmeno serum) start from $35 a month.

You don’t need insurance to access Hers prescription medications.

Shipping and the online consultation are free.

Happy Head Prices

Happy Head products are available on subscription and cost $22 to $149 a month, depending on the product you go for. The first month can be cheaper.

For example:

  • Oral finasteride costs $24 for a one-month supply.

  • Oral minoxidil is $66 for a three-month supply.

  • Topical dutasteride, finasteride & minoxidil costs $119 a month.

  • Topical finasteride, minoxidil & latanoprost costs $149 a month. 

You can pause, skip, or cancel subscriptions any time.

Shipping and the online consultation are free.

That’s it for Hers versus Happy Head for hair loss.

Both telehealth companies offer hair loss treatments online, but here are those important points again to help you decide between the two:

  • The products. Hers offers prescription and non-prescription hair loss treatment options like minoxidil and finasteride in pills, chews, sprays, foams, and serum formulations. Happy Head offers prescription hair loss treatments that include minoxidil, finasteride, dutasteride, and spironolactone in pills or topical solutions.

  • The process. The process is similar for both companies. You’ll start with a quiz to share some info about your hair and health, a healthcare provider will go over your answers and create a custom treatment plan, treatments are delivered to your door, and you’ll have ongoing access to providers.

  • The price. Hers hair loss treatments start from under $13 a bottle, and Hair Blends treatments start from $35 a month. Happy Head treatments cost $22 to $149 a month.

The road to thicker, fuller hair starts here. If you’re interested in Hers hair loss treatments, learn more about your options with our free hair quiz.

*Based on self-reported data as of August 2024 from approximately 2,846 Hers customers after one year of treatment.

**Individual results may vary. Based on self-reported data as of November 2024 from approximately 338 Hers customers after six months of treatment.

12 Sources

  1. Al-Horani RA, et al. (2024). Dutasteride. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK603726/
  2. Aleissa M. (2023). The efficacy and safety of oral spironolactone in the treatment of female pattern hair loss: a systematic review and meta-analysis. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10502763
  3. Almohanna HM, et al. (2018). The role of vitamins and minerals in hair loss: a review. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6380979/
  4. Boersma IH, et al. (2014). The effectiveness of finasteride and dutasteride used for 3 years in women with androgenetic alopecia. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25382509/
  5. Bloch LD, et al. (2018). Latanoprost and minoxidil: comparative double-blind, placebo-controlled study for the treatment of hair loss. http://www.surgicalcosmetic.org.br/Content/imagebank/pdf/v10/10_n1_618_en.pdf
  6. Evron E, et al. (2020). Natural hair supplement: friend or foe? Saw palmetto, a systematic review in alopecia. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7706486/
  7. Happy Head. (n.d.). https://www.happyhead.com/home
  8. Patel P, et al. (2023). Minoxidil. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK482378/
  9. Patibandla S, et al. (2023). Spironolactone. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK554421/
  10. Sinawe H, et al. (2023). Ketoconazole. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK559221/
  11. Suchonwanit P, et al. (2019). Minoxidil and its use in hair disorders: a review. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6691938/
  12. Zito PM, et al. (2024). Finasteride. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK513329/
Editorial Standards

Hims & Hers has strict sourcing guidelines to ensure our content is accurate and current. We rely on peer-reviewed studies, academic research institutions, and medical associations. We strive to use primary sources and refrain from using tertiary references. See a mistake? Let us know at [email protected]!

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. The information contained herein is not a substitute for and should never be relied upon for professional medical advice. Always talk to your doctor about the risks and benefits of any treatment. Learn more about our editorial standards here.

Sara Harcharik Perkins, MD

Sara Harcharik Perkins, MD, FAAD is a board-certified dermatologist and Assistant Professor in the Department of Dermatology at the Yale School of Medicine. She is the director of the Teledermatology Program, as well as the Associate Program Director of the Yale Dermatology Residency Training Program. Her research focuses on telemedicine and medical education. Her practice includes general medical dermatology, high-risk skin cancer, and procedural dermatology.

Dr. Perkins completed her undergraduate education at the University of Pennsylvania and obtained her medical degree at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. She completed her medical internship at the Massachusetts General Hospital, followed by residency training in dermatology at Yale University, after which she joined the faculty.

Dr. Perkins has been a member of the Hims & Hers Medical Advisory Board since 2018. Her commentary has been featured in NBC News, Real Simple, The Cut, and Yahoo, among others.

Publications:

  • Ahmad, M., Christensen, S. R., & Perkins, S. H. (2023). The impact of COVID-19 on the dermatologic care of nonmelanoma skin cancers among solid organ transplant recipients. JAAD international, 13, 98–99. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10518328/

  • Ahmad, M., & Perkins, S. H. (2023). Learning dermatology in medical school: analysis of dermatology topics tested in popular question banks. Clinical and experimental dermatology, 48(4), 361–363. https://academic.oup.com/ced/article-abstract/48/4/361/6869515?redirectedFrom=fulltext&login=false

  • Belzer, A., Leasure, A. C., Cohen, J. M., & Perkins, S. H. (2023). The association of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma and basal cell carcinoma with solid organ transplantation: a cross-sectional study of the All Of Us Research Program. International journal of dermatology, 62(10), e564–e566. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ijd.16700

  • Ahmad, M., Marson, J. W., Litchman, G. H., Perkins, S. H., & Rigel, D. S. (2022). Usage and perceptions of teledermatology in 2021: a survey of dermatologists. International journal of dermatology, 61(7), e235–e237. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ijd.16209

  • Asabor, E. N., Bunick, C. G., Cohen, J. M., & Perkins, S. H. (2021). Patient and physician perspectives on teledermatology at an academic dermatology department amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 84(1), 158–161. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7491373/

  • Belzer, A., Olamiju, B., Antaya, R. J., Odell, I. D., Bia, M., Perkins, S. H., & Cohen, J. M. (2021). A novel medical student initiative to enhance provision of teledermatology in a resident continuity clinic during the COVID-19 pandemic: a pilot study. International journal of dermatology, 60(1), 128–129. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7753449/

  • Cohen, J. M., Bunick, C. G., & Perkins, S. H. (2020). The new normal: An approach to optimizing and combining in-person and telemedicine visits to maximize patient care. Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 83(5), e361–e362. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7316470/

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