Recovery Timeline · Day 0
Day 0 (Surgery Day): What to Expect & Aftercare
On surgery day, your grafts are at their most fragile. The priorities are simple: do not touch the recipient area, sleep elevated at roughly 45 degrees, take the medications your clinic prescribed, and avoid bending over. Most clinics apply a headband and donor-area bandage that stays on until tomorrow.
What to expect
- Numbness in both the donor and recipient areas as anesthesia wears off — this can last hours to days
- Pinpoint redness and tiny crusts forming at each graft site
- A tight, tender feeling in the donor area (the back and sides of your scalp)
- Mild oozing from the donor area on the first night — many clinics suggest a towel over your pillow
How to care for it
- Do not touch, scratch, or rub the recipient area — grafts are not anchored yet
- Sleep on your back, elevated at about 45° (travel pillow or stacked pillows)
- Take prescribed antibiotics, anti-inflammatories, and pain medication exactly as directed
- No alcohol, and no smoking if you can possibly avoid it — both impair healing
- Avoid bending at the waist; squat instead if you must pick something up
Is this normal?
- Normal Mild throbbing or tightness at the donor area
- Normal Small spots of blood on the bandage or pillow towel
- Normal Numb patches on the scalp
- Ask your clinic Bleeding that soaks through dressings and does not slow
- Ask your clinic Severe pain not controlled by prescribed medication
Contact your clinic promptly if you notice
- Heavy bleeding that does not respond to gentle pressure
- Signs of allergic reaction to medication (rash, swelling of face or throat, difficulty breathing)
Frequently asked questions
Can I sleep normally after hair transplant surgery?
Not yet. For roughly the first 7–10 nights, sleep on your back with your head elevated at about 45 degrees to reduce swelling and protect grafts from rubbing on the pillow. A U-shaped travel pillow helps keep your head in place.
When do the bandages come off?
Most clinics remove or have you remove the donor-area bandage 24–48 hours after surgery. The recipient area is usually left uncovered. Follow your own clinic’s instructions exactly.
Does the transplant hurt after the anesthesia wears off?
Most patients describe donor-area soreness and scalp tightness rather than severe pain. Prescribed pain medication typically controls it well for the first one to two nights.
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