Top Hair Treatments Providers in Edinburgh

Best Hair Treatments Practitioners in Edinburgh

Dr Joanna Niciejewska Bds

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Dr Joanna Niciejewska Bds
HISSave Face

BDS .

Rating
( reviews)
Location
Edinburgh EH2 4PY, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Asel Nawroz

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Dr Asel Nawroz
HISSave Face

BDS

Rating
( reviews)
Location
Edinburgh EH2 4PY, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Victoria Dobbie

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Dr Victoria Dobbie
HISSave Face

BDS

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( reviews)
Location
Edinburgh EH2 4PY, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Derna Oaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa34aaleary Hughes

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Derna Oaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa34aaleary Hughes

Aesthetics Practitioner

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( reviews)
Location
Edinburgh EH3 6AA, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Barbara Johnson

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Barbara Johnson

Diploma In Beauty Technology

Rating
(16 reviews)
Location
Edinburgh EH3 6RX, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Nino Rionidze

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Dr Nino Rionidze

MD

Rating
(28 reviews)
Location
Edinburgh EH9 1HQ, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Liliana Ramirez Pena

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Dr Liliana Ramirez Pena
HIS

Member Of The General

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( reviews)
Location
Edinburgh EH1 2DP, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Becky Harley

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Dr Becky Harley
HIS

Qualified General Practitioner (GP)

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( reviews)
Location
Edinburgh EH1 2DP, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Louise Caithness

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Louise Caithness

Aesthetic Practitioner

Rating
(51 reviews)
Location
Edinburgh EH12 5HD, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Antonia Graham

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Antonia Graham
HIS

Registered Nurse Prescriber Practising

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( reviews)
Location
Edinburgh EH1 2DP, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Sonia Keane

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Dr Sonia Keane
HIS

Doctor

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( reviews)
Location
Edinburgh EH1 2DP, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Hair-treatments Treatment in Edinburgh

Hair treatments is an umbrella term for medical, cosmetic, and aesthetic interventions aimed at improving hair growth, scalp health, hair strength, or appearance. It can mean very different things depending on context. On the medical side, youre looking at treatments for hair loss like topical minoxidil, oral medications, PRP (platelet-rich plasma), low-level laser therapy, or surgery like hair transplantation. On the cosmetic side, it includes conditioning, scalp treatments, keratin smoothing, bonding treatments, or hair fibre camouflage. Mechanisms vary: medications alter the hair growth cycle, PRP uses growth factors from your own blood, lasers stimulate follicles with light energy, and cosmetic treatments mainly coat, hydrate, or strengthen the hair shaft rather than changing growth. ([nhs.uk](https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/hair-loss/), [aad.org](https://www.aad.org/public/diseases/hair-loss))
Our dataset currently has 35 clinic(s), with approximately 2044 reviews and an average rating of 4.744117647.

Medical Infrastructure:

    • NHS Lothian tertiary centres including Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh and Western General Hospital
    • Multiple HIS-regulated independent clinics
    • Private hospitals (Spire Shawfair Park, Nuffield Health Edinburgh, Waterfront Private Hospital)

Local Aethetics Market:

    Highly mature and saturated metropolitan aesthetic market

Goals of Hair-treatments Treatment

  • Slow or stop hair loss progression. ([nhs.uk](https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/hair-loss/))
  • Stimulate regrowth or thicken existing hair where follicles are still active. ([aad.org](https://www.aad.org/public/diseases/hair-loss))
  • Improve scalp health to support healthier hair cycles.
  • Enhance cosmetic appearance, density, shine, or manageability of hair.

Hair-treatments Treatment Options

Medical & Non-Surgical Approaches

  • Medical treatments target biology of hair growth.
  • Cosmetic options only affect appearance, not follicles.
  • Surgery offers permanent redistribution but not cure of hair loss.

Pros of Hair-treatments Treatment

  • Many non-surgical options exist before surgery is considered. ([aad.org](https://www.aad.org/public/diseases/hair-loss))
  • Some treatments are evidence-based and widely studied (minoxidil, finasteride). ([nhs.uk](https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/hair-loss/))
  • Cosmetic treatments give fast visible improvement in hair texture or thickness.
  • Options can be combined for better outcomes.

Cons of Hair-treatments Treatment

  • Most treatments require long-term commitment to maintain results.
  • Not all hair loss types respond to the same treatments.
  • Some medications have side effects and need discussion.
  • Cosmetic treatments dont fix underlying hair loss causes.

Cost of Hair-treatments Treatment in Edinburgh

  • Costs vary massively. Over-the-counter treatments like minoxidil may cost GBP 20 to 40 per month. Private clinic-based treatments such as PRP can range from GBP 250 to 800 per session. Hair transplant surgery often ranges from GBP 3,000 to GBP 10,000+ depending on graft numbers. Cosmetic salon treatments may range from GBP 30 to GBP 300 per session. ([nhs.uk](https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/hair-loss/), [baaps.org.uk](https://baaps.org.uk/))
  • Type of treatment (medical vs cosmetic vs surgical).
  • Severity and pattern of hair loss.
  • Clinic location and practitioner expertise.
  • Number of sessions required.

Accessibility

Public transport:

    • Extensive bus and tram network
    • Rail connections to Glasgow, London and Aberdeen

Parking availability:

    • Limited parking in central districts
    • Better availability in suburban clinic locations

Clinic distribution:

    High concentration in city centre (New Town, West End) with secondary clusters in affluent suburbs (Morningside, Stockbridge, Bruntsfield)

Airport proximity:

    Approximately 20–30 minutes to Edinburgh Airport

Preparing for Your Hair-treatments Appointment

  • Get a proper diagnosis. Pattern matters.
  • Blood tests may be recommended to rule out deficiencies or thyroid issues.
  • Stop harsh hair practices that worsen breakage.
  • Ask about timelines. Most treatments take months.
Most hair treatments require ongoing maintenance. Medications are continuous. PRP often involves initial monthly sessions then maintenance every 612 months. Cosmetic treatments are repeated as needed.

Treatment Safety & Local Regulations

Most hair treatments are not painful. PRP involves injections and can cause mild discomfort. Hair transplants use local anaesthetic. ([aad.org](https://www.aad.org/public/diseases/hair-loss))

Medications can have systemic side effects and need discussion.Injectables must be done with sterile technique.Surgical options carry standard surgical risks.

    NICE does not routinely fund hair loss treatments on the NHS unless medically indicated.

    Local regulatory authority:

      • Healthcare Improvement Scotland (HIS) for independent clinics
      • General Medical Council (GMC) and Nursing & Midwifery Council (NMC) for clinicians

    Private insurance usage locally:

      • High for consultant dermatology and plastic surgery procedures
      • Recognised by major insurers
      • Cosmetic injectables predominantly self-funded

    Cosmetic finance availability:

      • Widely available for high-value procedures (liposuction, HIFU, surgical interventions)
      • Structured payment plans common in private hospital settings

    Who Is a Good Candidate?

    • People with early or moderate hair thinning where follicles still exist.
    • Those experiencing stress-related or hormonal hair loss once triggers are addressed.
    • People seeking cosmetic improvement without surgery.
    • Not ideal for fully scarred or inactive follicles without surgical options.

    Choosing a Clinic

    • Clear diagnosis of hair loss type before selling treatments. This matters more than people think.
    • GMC-registered doctor involvement for medical or injectable treatments. ([gmc-uk.org](https://www.gmc-uk.org/))
    • Transparent discussion of realistic outcomes and timelines.
    • Avoid clinics promising guaranteed regrowth.
    Current average rating citywide: 4.744117647

    Recovery & Long-Term Results

      Aftercare:
      • Medical treatments target biology of hair growth.
      • Cosmetic options only affect appearance, not follicles.
      • Surgery offers permanent redistribution but not cure of hair loss.