Precision frontal hairline design

Widow’s Peak Hair Transplant

A widow’s peak can be an inherited hairline shape or become more prominent as the temples recede. Learn how diagnosis, conservative design and frontal graft placement can soften or rebalance it.

  • Dr Harpreet Kalra · GMC 7126076
  • No upfront deposit
  • Glasgow city centre
Widow’s peak hairline reshaping
First question Shape or hair loss?
Main aim Soften and rebalance
Design priority Natural irregularity
Growth period Up to 10–18 months
Clinic imagery

Hairline reshaping examples

Hairline work must be planned around facial proportions and future hair loss. These clinic cases illustrate frontal restoration rather than guaranteeing a specific design.

Natural hairline transplant before, procedure-day and after result
Natural frontal hairline restoration A clinic patient shown before treatment, immediately after surgery and after healing.
Female frontal hairline transplant before and after result
Female frontal hairline restoration A before-and-after example showing how a high or sparse frontal line can be softened in a suitable patient.

Images are from Glasgow Hair Transplant Clinics. Individual healing, density, growth rate and final outcomes vary.

Hairline shape versus hair loss

What is a widow’s peak?

A widow’s peak is a V-shaped point in the centre of the frontal hairline. For many people it is a normal inherited feature present from childhood and not a sign of male-pattern loss. The cosmetic concern usually comes from one of three situations: the peak is naturally prominent, the hairline on either side is high, or progressive temple recession makes the central point appear sharper over time.

Those situations require differen