"How many grafts do I need?" is one of the first questions every patient asks — and one of the hardest to answer without seeing your photos. This guide gives you reliable estimates by Norwood stage, explains the four factors that affect your personal graft count, and tells you exactly what a surgeon looks for when making that recommendation.
Before looking at graft counts, it is worth understanding what a graft actually is — because the number you see quoted is often misunderstood.
Hair does not grow from individual follicles scattered separately across your scalp. It grows in naturally occurring groupings called follicular units — clusters of 1 to 4 hairs that share a common base and emerge together from the skin. A graft is one of these follicular units.
This means a 2,500-graft transplant does not produce 2,500 hairs. It produces approximately 5,000–7,500 hairs — because each graft contains an average of 2–3 hairs. This is why graft counts can seem lower than patients expect, and why the visual result is more substantial than the number alone suggests.
2,500 grafts × 2.5 hairs per graft average = approximately 6,250 individual hairs transplanted. For Afro hair patients, where each curly strand covers more surface area, the visual density achieved is typically even greater per graft.
The Norwood scale classifies male pattern hair loss from Stage 1 (no loss) to Stage 7 (complete loss of the top, leaving only a horseshoe of hair at the sides and back). It is the most widely used reference point for estimating graft count.
The table below gives the graft ranges our surgeons typically work with — by stage, area, and technique recommendation. These are estimates. Your exact count depends on the four factors covered in the next section.
| Norwood Stage | Hair Loss Pattern | Typical Graft Range | Recommended Technique |
|---|---|---|---|
| Norwood 2 | Early hairline recession at temples | 800–1,500 | DHI Gold |
| Norwood 3 | Deeper temple recession, early frontal thinning | 1,500–2,500 | DHI Gold |
| Norwood 3 Vertex | Norwood 3 + crown thinning beginning | 1,800–2,800 | DHI Gold |
| Norwood 4 | Clear frontal loss + mid-scalp recession | 2,500–3,500 | DHI Gold |
| Norwood 4A | Norwood 4 without crown separation | 2,800–3,800 | DHI / FUE |
| Norwood 5 | Frontal + crown + bridge between the two | 3,000–4,000 | DHI / FUE |
| Norwood 6 | Extensive loss — frontal, crown, bridge merged | 3,500–4,500 | DHI / FUE |
| Norwood 7 | Only sides and back remaining | 4,000–5,000+ | DHI / FUE |
Two patients with identical Norwood 4 hair loss can receive recommendations of 2,600 and 3,400 grafts respectively — because their donor density, hair calibre, scalp laxity, and coverage goals are different. The table is a starting point. Your surgeon's assessment of your photos is the correct number.
The Norwood stage tells your surgeon roughly where you are. These four factors determine exactly how many grafts you need to achieve your goal.
The number of follicular units per cm² in your donor zone (back and sides of scalp). Average is 70–90 FU/cm². High donor density means more grafts are available. Low density limits what can be safely extracted without leaving the donor area looking sparse. This is the most important limiting factor for advanced Norwood cases.
Thick, coarse hair covers more scalp per strand than fine, thin hair. A patient with naturally thick hair may achieve the same visual density with 2,200 grafts that a fine-haired patient needs 3,000 to match. Afro and curly hair — because each strand covers more surface area — typically produces excellent density results with fewer grafts.
The size of the area to be covered — measured in cm² — is a core input into graft planning. A frontal hairline zone is typically 25–35 cm². A full frontal and crown zone may be 80–120 cm². Larger areas require more grafts to achieve meaningful density, which is why Norwood 6–7 cases often require two sessions spaced 12 months apart.
Some patients want natural-looking moderate density. Others want maximum possible density. The goal affects graft distribution — concentrating grafts in the hairline for maximum frontal impact is a different plan from spreading them across a wide area for uniform coverage. Your surgeon discusses this in detail during consultation.
One of the most common questions from Black patients is whether they need as many grafts as patients with straight hair. The honest answer is: usually fewer — and the results are often more impressive per graft.
Afro-textured and tightly coiled hair grows in a spiral pattern and, when it emerges from the scalp, curves and expands. A single Afro strand covers significantly more visible scalp surface area than a straight strand of equivalent calibre. This means:
The trade-off is that Afro follicle extraction requires specialist technique — the curved follicle shaft demands adapted extraction angles to avoid transection. This is why choosing a clinic with genuine Afro hair expertise is critical to achieving the graft count your surgeon estimates.
Female hair loss follows a different pattern to male androgenetic alopecia. Women typically experience diffuse thinning across the top of the scalp — the Ludwig scale — rather than the defined recession pattern of Norwood stages. This affects graft planning in two specific ways.
First, because women's hair loss is more diffuse, grafts are spread across a wider area to increase density evenly — rather than concentrated in a hairline. Second, women are often excellent candidates for No-Shave DHI, since the procedure needs to be completely invisible throughout recovery in most professional and social contexts.
Typical graft counts for women: Ludwig I (mild diffuse thinning) — 1,000–2,000 grafts. Ludwig II (moderate) — 2,000–3,000 grafts. Traction alopecia (edges/temples) — 1,200–2,200 grafts.
The maximum number of grafts that can be safely extracted in a single session depends almost entirely on donor density. Surgeons typically extract no more than 50–60% of the available donor follicles in a single session — leaving the remaining follicles in place to maintain donor zone density and preserve the natural appearance of the back and sides.
For most patients, this safe limit is approximately 3,000–5,000 grafts per session. For very advanced Norwood 6–7 cases that require more than 5,000 grafts total, a second session is planned 12 months after the first — once the donor zone has had time to recover and redistribute.
Any clinic offering "unlimited grafts with no limits" without first assessing your donor density should be questioned carefully. Over-harvesting the donor zone permanently depletes it and leaves visible patchiness at the back of the scalp.
Send photos of your hairline (front, top, and sides) and your donor zone (back of scalp). Our surgeon reviews your photos and sends your estimated graft count, technique recommendation, and exact all-inclusive price within 24 hours. Free, no obligation.
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Send photos of your hairline and donor zone. Your surgeon personally reviews them and tells you your graft count, technique, and exact all-inclusive price. No obligation.