
Stage 1: Fully normal
A youthful hairline with no visible recession. No treatment needed.
0 grafts (surgery not recommended)
From mild temple recession to extensive loss: the Norwood scale is the global clinical standard for male-pattern hair loss. See which stage matches your situation — and how many grafts full restoration may take.
Get a personalised graft estimate
A youthful hairline with no visible recession. No treatment needed.
0 grafts (surgery not recommended)

Mild triangular recession at the temples. The hairline moves back slightly. Medication (e.g. minoxidil) may still be enough.
approx. 1,000 – 1,500 grafts (light density work)

Loss is clearly visible; temples are deeply recessed. Thinning often begins at the crown (vertex) as well.
approx. 1,500 – 2,500 grafts

Strong temple recession plus visible crown loss. Only a moderate bridge of hair remains between front and vertex.
approx. 2,500 – 3,500 grafts

Bare areas at the front and crown grow; the mid bridge becomes progressively thinner.
approx. 3,500 – 4,500 grafts

The bridge is gone. One large continuous bald area runs from the hairline to the back.
approx. 4,500 – 5,500+ grafts (often two sessions)

The most advanced pattern: only a narrow band of hair remains at the sides and back.
Classic transplantation is often difficult if donor hair cannot cover the full area. Options such as SMP may need to be considered.
Your Norwood stage shows how large the bald area is. Whether a transplant can look natural, however, depends on another factor: your donor area.
Grafts are taken from the permanent ring at the back. A dense donor zone may yield 4,000+ grafts safely; a weak donor area limits extraction to avoid visible thinning at the back.
Unsure if you are stage 3 or 4 — and what it would cost? Use our free service: upload four photos. Partner physicians review your donor area, calculate the grafts you need, and we send up to three fixed-price quotes (Switzerland & Turkey) for anonymous comparison.
Start free clinical analysis (about 2 minutes)