Eyebrow restoration is the most artistic step in the field. Each follicle is placed at a specific angle, depth, and density to recreate the way eyebrows actually grow. No more daily pencil. No microblading touch-ups every twelve months. Permanent.
Eyebrow hair grows in a precise, near-horizontal direction across the brow — the angle changes subtly across the length, with the head of the brow growing more upward and the tail growing more flat. Get the angle wrong by even ten degrees and the result reads as obvious.
Each transplanted follicle is placed individually using FUE — typically taken from above the ears or the occipital donor area — with the angle, depth, and direction calibrated for that exact spot in the brow. A typical session uses 200 to 400 grafts per brow. The whole procedure takes 4 to 6 hours.
Done well, the result looks like the eyebrows you should have grown. Done badly, it looks like rows of pubic hair. The difference is entirely in the surgeon's hand.
1. Over-plucked brows from the 90s and 2000s. Decades of plucking can cause permanent loss. Restoration brings them back in the shape you want — not the shape fashion gave you twenty years ago.
2. Sparse or naturally thin brows. Some people simply have thin brow hair from birth. Eyebrow transplant adds density without ongoing maintenance.
3. Scarring from injury or burns. Brow hair doesn't grow back through scar tissue. Transplant restores normal-looking density across the scarred area.
4. Alopecia areata in remission. Once the autoimmune activity is stable, transplanted hair grows normally.
5. Patients tired of microblading. Microblading fades and needs touch-ups every 12–18 months. Eyebrow transplant is one procedure, permanent — no ongoing maintenance appointments, no recurring fade-and-redo cycles.
Eyebrow procedures take 4–6 hours and use 200–400 grafts per brow. Recovery is short: small scabs at each implantation site for the first 5–7 days, easily covered with hair worn over the area or a hat. Most patients are presentable in seven to ten days.
New growth begins around month four; final result lands at month twelve. Once it's grown in, the maintenance is light — trim the brow hairs as they grow (they grow at the pace of scalp hair, faster than native brow). No more daily pencil. No microblading touch-ups every twelve months.
Front-facing photos of your brows in natural light. Dr. Jones reviews personally and sends back density estimates, design notes, and a quoted range.