Top 5 Hair Supplements
Hair loss is one of the most common concerns men face — and one of the least talked about. A hairline that’s slowly moving back. A crown that’s getting thinner. A density that just isn’t what it used to be. For many men, these changes start subtly and accelerate faster than expected.
Male pattern hair loss affects roughly 50% of men by age 50 and up to 85% by age 70.1 The supplement aisle has responded with a surge of products making bold promises. Most fall short. This guide is designed to help you understand what actually works, what to avoid, and what separates a formula built for real results from one built to sell.
How To Pick A Good Hair Supplement &
Avoid Junk
This short guide is here to help you understand what separates a formula that actually works from one that’s built around marketing. We’ll show you what to look for, what to steer clear of, and share our picks for the top-rated men’s hair supplements.
But first, let’s take a moment to understand what’s actually happening beneath the scalp, at the follicle, and why the right hair supplement can make a meaningful difference when it addresses the real root causes of thinning and shedding.
Hair Supplements
What Are They All About?
Each hair strand originates from a follicle. A living, metabolically active structure beneath the scalp that requires a continuous supply of energy, nutrients, hormones, and blood flow to function. From hairline thickness to crown density, everything you see on the surface begins with what’s happening in that follicle.2,3
To understand how hair supplements work, it helps to understand the cycle every strand goes through and where that cycle can go wrong.
Anagen — The Growth Phase: This is the active phase, when the follicle is working to produce a hair strand and push it upward through the scalp. The longer a follicle stays in anagen, the longer and fuller your hair becomes. Roughly 85-90% of your hair is in this phase at any given time. In men with healthy follicles, the anagen phase can last years. In men experiencing hair loss, it shortens, sometimes dramatically.
Catagen — The Transition Phase: A short two- to three-week phase in which the follicle signals that it’s done growing for now. The hair strand detaches from its blood supply and stops receiving nutrients.
Telogen — The Resting and Shedding Phase: The follicle rests for about three months before the old hair sheds and a new anagen cycle begins. This is normal and healthy — shedding 50 to 100 hairs a day is considered typical.4 Problems arise when too many follicles enter telogen too early or stay there too long.5
A well-formulated hair supplement works primarily by supporting the anagen phase — helping follicles stay active and productive longer, re-entering the growth phase more efficiently, and having the nutritional raw materials they need to produce healthy, full strands while they’re there.6,7
What Causes Hair Thinning in Men?
For most men, DHT is the primary driver of hair loss. Understanding it is essential to understanding any hair supplement. DHT (dihydrotestosterone) is a hormone derived from testosterone by an enzyme called 5-alpha reductase. In men who are genetically sensitive to DHT, it binds to receptors in the hair follicle and initiates a gradual process called miniaturization: the follicle shrinks, the anagen phase shortens, and each successive strand comes in finer and weaker than the last. Over time, the follicle can become so small it can no longer produce visible hair at all.
This is the mechanism behind male pattern hair loss — the receding hairline, the thinning crown, the characteristic pattern that follows a predictable path determined largely by genetics. Follicles on the top and front of the scalp carry more DHT receptors than follicles on the sides and back, which is why hair loss follows the patterns it does.
DHT sensitivity is largely inherited, but age amplifies it. As testosterone levels shift with age, this contributes to why many men notice accelerating hair loss in their 40s and 50s even if thinning began gradually in their 20s or 30s.8-10
The hair follicle requires more cellular energy to function than almost any other structure in the body. At the base of each follicle, rapidly dividing cells work continuously to build the hair fiber — a process that depends entirely on efficient mitochondrial function and adequate ATP production. When cellular energy declines, as it naturally does with age, follicle cells have fewer resources to sustain that activity. The growth phase shortens. Strands come in thinner and weaker. And the cycle tips toward shedding more readily than it should.11
Hair follicles are among the most nutritionally demanding structures in the body. Because hair is not essential for survival, it’s one of the first places the body redirects resources when nutrients run low. Deficiencies in iron, zinc, biotin, folate, and B vitamins are among the most common and most overlooked drivers of hair thinning in men12-14
Every nutrient a follicle needs, oxygen, vitamins, minerals, hormones, reaches it through the blood. The scalp sits at the periphery of the circulatory system, making it one of the last places the body prioritizes delivery when circulation is compromised. As men age, scalp microcirculation naturally declines, meaning follicles receive less of what they need even when nutrition is adequate. Supporting healthy scalp circulation is the delivery system that makes everything else in a hair formula work.15-17
3 Things To AVOID
When Buying A Hair Supplement
1. MEGADOSES OF BIOTIN
Biotin is everywhere in the hair supplement aisle. Walk into any pharmacy or scroll through any supplement site, and you’ll find product after product leading with enormous biotin doses. 5,000 mcg, 10,000 mcg, even higher, as if the number itself were proof of effectiveness.
Here’s what the science actually says: there is no evidence that doses above 2,500 mcg provide any additional benefit for people who aren’t biotin-deficient.25,26 More importantly, the FDA has specifically warned that very high biotin supplementation can interfere with certain lab tests.27 This is not a minor footnote. It is a documented safety concern that most brands selling 10,000 mcg of biotin never mention.
A formula that leads with megadoses of biotin often signals that biotin is the only meaningful active ingredient in the bottle, and that the dose is designed to impress. Don’t overpay for megadoses of biotin. If a brand contains at least 2,500 mcg, it’s a high-quality supplement.
2. COLLAGEN
Collagen is one of the most heavily marketed ingredients in the hair and beauty supplement space. The promise is intuitive: hair is made of protein, collagen is a protein, and collagen supplements should support hair. The problem is that’s not how digestion works.
When you consume oral collagen, your digestive system breaks it down into individual amino acids, the same amino acids found in any dietary protein source.28 There is no mechanism by which those amino acids are directed preferentially to the hair follicle rather than to any other tissue in the body that needs them. The science does not support the claim that oral collagen supplementation improves hair growth or thickness in any clinically meaningful way.29
Collagen belongs in skincare. For hair, your money and your follicles are better served by ingredients that address the actual drivers of thinning at the cellular level, where the real work happens.
3. LACK OF BLOOD FLOW SUPPORT
This is the most critical gap in men’s hair supplements and the one most brands quietly ignore. A formula with no ingredients targeting DHT activity is a formula that’s missing the primary driver of male pattern hair loss. You can have the most bioavailable nutrients, the most carefully selected botanicals, the best cellular energy support, but if the formula doesn’t address DHT at the follicle level, it’s working around the problem rather than at it.
When evaluating a men’s hair supplement, look specifically for ingredients with clinical research supporting healthy DHT balance, like saw palmetto. Their presence signals that the formula was designed with an understanding of how male hair loss actually works, not just how to market to men who are experiencing it.30
2026’s Top Men’s Hair Supplements
Our review encompassed 84 different men’s hair supplements, putting each through our rigorous Review Scout assessment process. To determine the Top-Rated Men’s Hair Supplements of 2026, we looked for key ingredients that predicted effectiveness and overall safety, a solid return policy, and overall customer satisfaction.
PROS
- Contains Serevelle Saw Palmetto for DHT Support
- Contains Yüth Spermidine
- Contains Zinc Bisglycinate
- Contains d-Alpha Tocopherol (Vitamin E)
- Contains Vitamin D3
- Contains 2,500 mcg Biotin
CONS
- Often out of stock due to high demand
Why We Chose It
Stonehenge Health’s Dynamic Hair Energy for Men is our top pick for men’s hair supplements and the only formula we reviewed that meets all five of our criteria.
It leads with Serevelle™, a clinically studied saw palmetto extract backed by randomized trials showing meaningful reductions in DHT activity, the primary driver of male pattern hair loss. It includes Yüth™ spermidine to support cellular energy and follicle renewal, addressing the metabolic side of hair thinning that most supplements never address. EVNolMax™ delivers full-spectrum natural vitamin E in a highly bioavailable form, zinc bisglycinate ensures superior mineral absorption without the digestive issues that make other zinc forms harder to tolerate, and vitamin D3.
The formula also includes green tea extract, pumpkin seed, and beetroot — a targeted blend to support healthy scalp circulation, ensuring that every ingredient in the bottle can actually reach the follicle where it’s needed.
Stonehenge Health backs Dynamic Hair Energy for Men with a 90-day no-questions-asked money-back guarantee and offers bundle discounts for customers who want to commit to the full timeline the formula is designed around.
#2 Nutrafol Men
A-
Overall Grade
#2. Nutrafol Men
- OVERALL RATING 8.6/10
- Predicted Effectiveness 9.4/10
- Ingredient Quality 9.4/10
- Value 8.2/10
- Return Policy 7.7/10
- User Rating 8.1/10
PROS
- Contains Saw Palmetto
- Contains Chelated Zinc
- Contains d-Alpha Tocopherol (Vitamin E)
- Contains Vitamin D3
- Contains 3,000 mcg Biotin
CONS
- Generic Saw Palmetto
- No Spermidine
- Ingredients in a proprietary blend
- Limited 30-Day Return Policy
Why We Chose It
Nutrafol is one of the most recognized names in the hair supplement category, and for good reason. The formula checks four of the five boxes for a quality hair supplement, including saw palmetto, chelated zinc, d-alpha tocopherol, and vitamin D3. We were also happy to see a reasonable amount of biotin, not a megadose like some other brands on the list.
That said, there are a few notable drawbacks. Saw palmetto is buried in a proprietary blend, which makes it impossible to verify whether it’s included at a clinically effective dose. There’s also no spermidine, leaving out an ingredient linked to extending the hair growth cycle. The daily serving size of four capsules may also be inconvenient for some users.
Perhaps the most significant issue is the return policy. Nutrafol limits returns to 30 days, but hair supplements typically require several months of consistent use before results become visible. That window simply isn’t enough time to know whether the product is working, let alone decide if it’s worth keeping.
*For detailed information, please refer to the manufacturer’s product website. Nutrafol® is a registered trademark of Nutraceutical Wellness, Inc.
#3 MaryRuth’s Liquid Morning Multivitamin + Hair Growth
B
Overall Grade
#3. MaryRuth’s Liquid Morning Multivitamin + Hair Growth
- OVERALL RATING 8.3/10
- Predicted Effectiveness 8.2/10
- Ingredient Quality 9.2/10
- Value 8.2/10
- Return Policy 7.7/10
- User Rating 8.4/10
PROS
- Contains Zinc
- Contains d-Alpha Tocopherol (Vitamin E)
- Contains Vitamin D
- Vegan, Gluten-Free, Dairy-Free, Sugar-Free
CONS
- Uses Zinc Citrate Form
- No Saw Palmetto
- No Spermidine
- Contains a megadose of Biotin (10,000 mcg)
- Limited 30-Day Return Policy
Why We Chose It
MaryRuth’s Liquid Morning Multivitamin + Hair Growth contains two of our five essential ingredients for a quality hair supplement: vitamin E (d-alpha tocopherol) and vitamin D3. While we appreciate their addition of zinc, they use zinc citrate, which is less bioavailable.
The formula also contains a megadose of biotin at 10,000 mcg, well above the threshold where additional benefit has been demonstrated in people without a true deficiency, and at a level the FDA has specifically warned can interfere with certain lab tests.
MaryRuth’s does not contain saw palmetto, leaving the hormonal DHT pathway entirely unaddressed. It contains no spermidine, meaning cellular energy and follicle renewal are not supported.
Like Nutrafol, the return policy is limited to 30 days. This formula also comes in a liquid form, and its taste has been heavily scrutinized, with many saying it’s too thick and reminiscent of cough syrup.
*For detailed information, please refer to the manufacturer’s product website. MaryRuth’s® is a registered trademark of MRO MaryRuth, LLC.
#4 Weem Hair Skin and Nails Gummies
B
Overall Grade
#4. Weem Hair Skin and Nails Gummies
- OVERALL RATING 8.1/10
- Predicted Effectiveness 7/10
- Ingredient Quality 9/10
- Value 8.2/10
- Return Policy 8.2/10
- User Rating 8.3/10
PROS
- Contains Zinc
- Contains Vitamin E
- Contains Vitamin D
- Gluten-Free, Vegan, Non-GMO
CONS
- No Saw Palmetto
- No Spermidine
- Uses Zinc Citrate Form
- Uses Synthetic Vitamin E
- Uses Vitamin D2
- Contains a megadose of Biotin (5,000 mcg)
- Limited 60-Day Return Policy
Why We Chose It
Weem Hair, Skin and Nails Gummies follow a pattern similar to MaryRuth’s, leading with a megadose of biotin at 5,000 mcg, despite research not supporting additional benefit beyond 2,500 mcg for those without a true deficiency. As the most affordable option on our list, it comes with meaningful trade-offs. While Weem does include zinc, vitamin E, and vitamin D, all three are added in less bioavailable or synthetic forms, limiting how much the follicle can actually use. Saw palmetto and spermidine are both absent, leaving the two most important systems in a quality hair formula — hormonal DHT support and cellular energy — completely unaddressed. The gummy format itself also creates a physical limitation on how many active ingredients can be included at clinically meaningful doses, and the addition of sugar, glucose syrup, and titanium dioxide undermines the clean formulation most hair health consumers are looking for.
*For detailed information, please refer to the manufacturer’s product website. Weem® is a registered trademark of Weem LLC.
#5 Viviscal Man Advanced Hair Health
B-
Overall Grade
#5. Viviscal Man Advanced Hair Health
- OVERALL RATING 7.6/10
- Predicted Effectiveness 6.5/10
- Ingredient Quality 7.6/10
- Value 8.2/10
- Return Policy 7.7/10
- User Rating 8.1/10
PROS
- Contains Zinc
CONS
- No Saw Palmetto
- No Spermidine
- Uses Zinc Oxide Form
- No Vitamin D3
- No Biotin
- Hero ingredient is collagen
- Limited 30-Day Return Policy
Why We Chose It
Viviscal Man Advanced Hair Health is one of the more established names in the hair supplement category, however, when measured against our five criteria for a quality hair supplement, the formula leaves significant gaps. The zinc used is zinc oxide rather than the more bioavailable zinc bisglycinate. Vitamin D3, saw palmetto, Vitamin E, and spermidine are all missing. The hero ingredient in their product is AminoMar Marine Complex collagen. The problem is, oral collagen is broken down by digestion into generic amino acids, the same amino acids available from any dietary protein source. There is no mechanism by which those amino acids are directed preferentially to the hair follicle, and no clinical evidence that oral collagen supplementation produces meaningful improvements in hair growth or thickness.
The return policy is limited to 30 days. We prefer to see 90 for a supplement that takes time for consumers to notice meaningful improvements.
*For detailed information, please refer to the manufacturer’s product website. Viviscal® is a registered trademark of Viviscal Limited, a subsidiary of Church & Dwight Co., Inc.
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