Smoking can seriously affect your hair transplant result. Learn why, how long to stop before and after surgery, and how to give your grafts the best chance to grow.
Nicotine narrows your blood vessels and reduces oxygen in the blood. After a transplant, newly placed grafts depend on a rich blood supply to survive and grow. Smoking starves them of that oxygen, which can lower graft survival, slow healing and increase the risk of poor growth or infection. This is why clinics strongly advise stopping around your surgery.
| Period | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Before surgery | Stop at least 1–2 weeks before (the longer the better). |
| After surgery | Avoid for at least 2 weeks — ideally a month. |
| Vaping / nicotine gum | Also restricts blood flow — avoid these too. |
Quitting 1–2 weeks before improves circulation by surgery day.
The first two weeks after are the most critical for graft survival.
Good nutrition and water support healing and regrowth.
See the full recovery timeline.
If quitting entirely is not possible, cutting down as much as you can — especially in the first two weeks after surgery — still helps. Be honest with your clinic so they can advise you. Many patients use a transplant as the motivation they needed to stop for good.

Send a few photos and our team will give you a personalised plan and aftercare advice, with a quote within 24 hours.