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Fundamentals

The Norwood scale, honestly

Clinicians don't say "thinning a bit." They use a seven-stage map — and knowing where you sit on it changes what the evidence can tell you.

By the Editorial Team · Citations below · Medical review: pending — treat as education, not advice

Key points

Where the scale comes from

James Hamilton proposed the first systematic classification of male pattern baldness in 1951, observing patterns across more than 300 men. O'Tar Norwood revised and extended it in 1975 into the seven-stage system (with variants) that dermatology still uses today. It isn't a severity score of how you look — it's a map of which zones are affected: the frontotemporal hairline, the crown (vertex), and eventually the bridge between them.

The seven stages, in plain language

Why stage changes the conversation

Almost every treatment trial enrolls and reports by pattern and stage. The pivotal finasteride trials, for instance, enrolled men with predominantly mild-to-moderate vertex loss; the minoxidil comparison trials similarly studied defined stages. Extrapolating those results to an N6 pattern isn't supported by the same evidence — which is one reason "it worked for him" is a weak basis for expectations.

Self-assessing without fooling yourself

Two honest problems: you can't see your own crown, and day-to-day variation (lighting, haircut, wet vs. dry) swamps slow change. What works better:

  1. Photograph hairline and crown monthly, same angle, flat indoor light.
  2. Compare across quarters, not days.
  3. If it matters for a treatment decision, get a dermatologist's staging — a trained eye with a dermatoscope beats a phone camera.
This article is education, not medical advice, and doesn't create a clinician-patient relationship. Treatment decisions belong with you and a licensed clinician. We are independent: no pharmaceutical funding, nothing to sell you.

Citations

  1. Hamilton JB. Patterned loss of hair in man: types and incidence. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 1951;53(3):708-728.
  2. Norwood OT. Male pattern baldness: classification and incidence. South Med J. 1975;68(11):1359-1365.
  3. Kaufman KD, et al. Finasteride in the treatment of men with androgenetic alopecia. J Am Acad Dermatol. 1998;39(4 Pt 1):578-589.