The temples and frontal scalp are usually where men first notice hair loss. This is the classic Norwood II–III presentation — and the earlier you treat it, the more hair you keep. Here's what the evidence actually supports.
$45 flat
6-month supply · Licensed provider · No subscription
Androgenetic alopecia. Hair follicles at the temples and frontal scalp are genetically sensitive to dihydrotestosterone (DHT). Over years, DHT gradually miniaturizes these follicles — they produce thinner, shorter hairs with each cycle until eventually they stop producing visible hair at all. Your genes set the ceiling. Your age and testosterone milieu determine how fast you approach it.
The recession pattern is pretty consistent: first thinning above the temples (the M-shape appearance), then backward progression through the frontal third of the scalp. Not everyone progresses at the same rate, and not everyone reaches the same endpoint.
What actually works
Finasteride 1mg daily — the foundation. Blocks DHT. Stabilizes shedding within 3–4 months, with meaningful regrowth at 6–12 months. Strongest evidence base of any oral hair-loss drug.
Oral minoxidil 1.25mg nightly — stimulates the follicle growth phase directly. Paired with finasteride, produces better frontal regrowth than either alone.
Dutasteride 0.5mg daily — stronger DHT suppression for men who don't respond to finasteride, or for more advanced recession. Off-label for hair loss.
For most men with early-to-moderate recession, a combination of finasteride + oral minoxidil produces the most visible frontal improvement. That's our Growth plan.
What doesn't work (or barely works)
Caffeine shampoos and biotin supplements — no meaningful evidence for pattern hair loss
Saw palmetto — weak evidence, much less effective than finasteride
Scalp massage in isolation — no convincing data as a standalone therapy
Vitamin D, zinc, and other supplement stacks — useful only if you have a diagnosed deficiency
Most "thickening" topical products — cosmetic effect only, no follicle-level change
Some adjuncts have mixed evidence (PRP injections, low-level laser therapy caps). They're not worthless, but they're not the foundation of a serious regimen — and they're expensive. Start with the medications that have the strongest trials behind them.
Realistic timeline
Weeks 1–8. Sometimes a temporary "dread shed" — looks alarming, is actually the medication resetting hair into a new growth cycle. Stay on treatment.
Months 3–4. Shedding begins to stabilize. You may not see regrowth yet, but the daily loss slows.
Months 6–9. Visible thickening, especially at the frontal zones where you've been treating. Take comparison photos here.
Month 12. Roughly the peak of regrowth. Continued treatment maintains gains. Stopping loses them over 6–12 months.
When to consider a transplant
Transplant becomes the main remaining option when the recession has been present long enough that follicles are too miniaturized to respond to medication — usually years of visible absence in a given area. Good transplant outcomes depend on first stabilizing the hair you still have with medication; otherwise, you're transplanting into a scalp that's still thinning elsewhere. We don't do transplants, but we'll refer you to a board-certified dermatologist or hair restoration surgeon when it's time.
Clinical note. The single biggest predictor of good outcomes for receding hairlines is starting treatment early. A Norwood II–III treated promptly often stabilizes at close to baseline. A Norwood V treated for the first time at 50 has much less to work with.
How the visit works
Submit the hair-loss intake (history, front/temple/crown photos, medication list)
A licensed provider reviews within a few hours
If appropriate, a 6-month supply is e-prescribed to your chosen pharmacy
You're charged $45 only on approval — auto-refunded if declined
Pricing
$45 flat visit fee. Generic finasteride runs $15–30/month; generic oral minoxidil $10–20/month. Medication cost is separate from the visit.