Traction alopecia affects nearly a third of Black women, and most cases are reversible if caught early. Here is where to start.
Edges are among the most delicate areas of the scalp, and they absorb the consequences of nearly every styling decision made above them. Tight ponytails, chemical treatments, excessive heat, and repeated friction from wigs and weaves all contribute to a condition called traction alopecia, which affects close to one-third of Black women. Research highlighted by a Black female dermatologist points to styling imbalance, not genetics, as the primary driver in most cases.
The encouraging part is that traction alopecia is largely reversible when caught before permanent follicle damage sets in. The discouraging part is that the habits responsible for it are often the most convenient ones, the daily slicked-down ponytail, the same part worn for years, the edge control with a drying formula that gets reapplied without a second thought.
What follows is a breakdown of ten practical changes that address the most common causes of edge thinning.
Rethink your go-to styles
Loosen up on the ponytail
A tight ponytail worn daily pulls consistently at the hairline in ways that accumulate over time. The style itself is not the problem. The tension and frequency are. Rotating between styles and avoiding the reflex to slick edges completely flat gives the follicles along the hairline room to recover.
Switch your part regularly
Parting hair in the same place every day concentrates friction and stress on one section of the scalp. Changing the part, even slightly and just a few times per week, redistributes that pressure and reduces the chance of breakage along that line.
Take breaks from wigs and weaves
Lace fronts and weaves are versatile, but extended wear without breaks creates friction at the hairline and can restrict the scalp’s ability to breathe. Scheduled rest periods between installs are not optional maintenance; they are part of protecting what grows underneath.
Adjust your product routine
Clear clogged follicles
Product buildup on the scalp blocks the follicles that hair grows from. Regular scalp exfoliation, using a gentle scrub or a clarifying treatment, clears that buildup and supports a healthier growth environment. This step tends to get skipped, and the effects show up at the edges first.
Choose hydrating edge control
Many edge control products contain alcohol, which delivers a clean, sleek finish by pulling moisture out of the hair shaft. Switching to an alcohol-free formula maintains hold without that trade-off. Hydrated edges are more pliable and less prone to breakage.
Condition the edges specifically
The hairline benefits from direct conditioning attention rather than whatever product happens to run off during a wash. Leave-in conditioners applied directly to the edges, particularly those formulated for fragile or thinning areas, help maintain the moisture level that keeps fine hairs from snapping.
Watch what your face wash is doing
Cleansers and toners used along the forehead can reach the hairline and strip it of moisture, particularly formulas designed to control oil. Thorough rinsing after face washing and following up with a leave-in conditioner along the hairline prevents that incidental drying.
Support growth actively
Massage the scalp regularly
Scalp massage increases circulation to the follicles. A few minutes of gentle pressure applied directly to the edges, using light carrier oils like grapeseed oil combined with peppermint or lemongrass essential oil, encourages blood flow and creates a better environment for growth.
Pull back from over-styling baby hairs
Give it time
Hair growth is slow, and hairline restoration tends to be slower than other areas. Visible improvement typically takes several months of consistent care. Staying the course with a gentler routine, without reverting to the habits that caused the thinning in the first place, is where results actually come from.

