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How to sell your hair for cash

Posted May 15 2008, 09:47 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from Xin Lu at partner blog Wise Bread.

I first read about selling hair in "Les Misérables," when Fantine sold her head of gold to clothe her daughter, Cosette. The hair trade just seems like such an archaic idea, but, actually, high-quality hairpieces are still made from real human hair and there is a huge market for sourcing natural hair.

Here are some tips and information on how to sell your tresses for cash.

Leave your hair untreated. Most wig makers want "virgin" hair that has no chemical treatment. Virgin hair is generally less damaged, lasts longer in a hair piece, and looks more natural. If you want to sell your hair, make sure you do not dye, perm or bleach it.

Grow your hair out. Generally you need at least 10 inches of hair to be able to make a sale for extensions and wigs.

Take good care of yourself and your hair. Healthy hair that shines fetches a better price in the open market. Some basic tips I have read are to brush your hair gently, eat well, and do not take any drugs since hair retains traces of the drugs you take. Also, it is best not to shampoo your hair every day because that strips your hair of its natural oils. Smoking is also detrimental to your hair because the scent usually stays long after you light up a cigarette.

List and market your hair. Hairwork and The Hair Trader are two sites that specialize in hair-trading classifieds. The first site charges $20 to post an ad, and the second is free. They allow you to post a description of your hair, pictures and your price. It is usually recommended that you get paid first, then have your hair cut at a professional salon, and bundle the hair in a ponytail or braid. You could also try to auction your hair on eBay or post a classified ad on craigslist, but I think your chances are much better on the sites specializing in hair.

How much can you make? The price that buyers are willing to pay really depends on the color, length and quality of your hair. Also, if you market it well, you will have better results. Some sold listings on The Hair Trader have great photographs and descriptions. For example, this woman specified that she grew her hair with the intention to sell and took very good care of it, and she managed to sell it for more than $1,000 in just a week. It took her four years to grow that hair, but $1,000 is still a good return on something that is fairly painless to give up. It also seems that her research into the hair trade led to a healthy lifestyle, and that is a great bonus for her.

If you are cutting your long locks but do not want to sell them, you can always donate them to Wigs for Kids, Pantene Beautiful Lengths or Locks of Love. These charities provide wigs to children who have lost their hair due to illness. Since wigs are considered cosmetic, they are not covered by insurance, and a lot of families cannot afford a wig made from human hair.

In closing, I think if you already have beautiful long hair and need a bit of cash, selling those locks is definitely something you should look into. It is quite profitable and definitely much less painful than selling any other body parts.

Other articles of interest at Wise Bread:

"How big of a house do you really need?"

"A simple guide to Series I savings bonds"

"Does living frugally hurt the economy?"

Comments

 

Hi my name is audra, I have donated my hair 2 times at  bo-ricks.  I just found out

that locks of love is a scam.  I never new that my hair was going somewhere else  I thought I was doing something nice and special for someone special and they would

have beaueifull  hair it made me feel good about myself that I had done something

great  but now look,  who knows where it went. Did someone else make money off

my hair that I was given to someone in need, For free, well  I should just sell it and

do what ever with the money or  maybe donate the money or whatever.  Someone could   have had something nice.   I take good care of my hair I have never  died or  

colored  or treated  so if someone could tell me how to sell it or whatever let me know

thanks Audra

I have donated my hair to Locks of Love and they are a great charity. According to Locks of Love's website, "Hair that is short, gray, or otherwise unusable will be sold to help offset manufacturing costs." Also, "Most of our recipients suffer from alopecia areata. Others have experienced hair loss from radiation therapy and chemotherapy, severe burns or trauma, and various other genetic and dermatological conditions." Because the real-hair wigs they provide to children have a retail cost of about $3,000 or more each, they do not provide real hair to children with short-term hair loss, but they do provide those children with synthetic hairpieces. With regards to their website saying that they do not manufacture hairpieces, I emailed them and they said that they send the hair to a manufacturer and pay the manufacturer to make the hair into hairpieces for individual children; they do NOT sell all of the hair that is sent to them and then buy the wigs (that would be completely asinine). And of course their program expenses are high, they receive mostly hair donations and it costs alot of money to turn that hair into wigs. Also, it is ridiculous to say that children with long-term hair loss don't deserve your hair donation because they don't have cancer, and it is also ridiculous to say that Locks of Love does not provide wigs to children who do have cancer. Please do your homework before you jump to conclusions and bash a charity that does good work for children. It is extremely irresponsible.

Hair Grows back.It is not a body part.Why noy sell?Mine has always been very shiny,straightand long.Now it is getting some grays shining like silver in the dark.Hard to trust so called charities.Money would help my family!  Kat

Is there any market for hair that has some silver?

My friend applied to Locks of Live for a wig for her cancer stricken child.  They wanted $3000 for a wig.  The family's income was $59K per year for four people and a sick kid.  Come on.  It's a scam.  Call it what it is...but don't play the kid cancer card.  IT stinks.

WELL, I TOO HAVE CUT MY HAIR AND "DONATED" TO LOCKS OF LOVE.  5 YEARS AGO.  ALL THIS TIME I'VE FELT REALLY GOOD ABOUT THAT BUT I AM NOT SURPRISED WHATSOEVER TO LEARN THAT, LIKE ALMOST E V R Y T H I N G  THESE DAYS, IT WAS A SCAM.  THEY MUST HAVE MADE A FORTUNE ON MY HAIR, AND THAT IS HURTFUL, BECAUSE AS SO MANY OF US KNOW, IT'S NOT EASY TO CUT OFF YOUR HAIR. I AM A RARE BREED, AS I AM ONE OF THE FEW REMAINING 4% OF THE WORLD'S POPULATION OF NATURAL RED HEADS.  I HAVE RED HAIR, NOT ANNIE RED, JUST THAT SHINY RED THAT EVERYONE CAN'T SEEM NOT TO COMMENT ON.  I HAVE ALWAYS PAMPERED MY HAIR, IT'S GOTTEN AT LEAST 1 BILLION COMMENTS.  IT'S GETTING HOT AGAIN& I'M READY TO CUT IT.  IN THIS ECONOMY, I THINK I'D LIKE TO SELL TO SOMEONE WHO CAN AFFORD WHAT IT'S WORTH.  CONTACT ME CRISSY CCKKSIMON@AOL.COM

I'm male 6'0' tall my hair is natural wavey it's about 3inches below my belt it's thick and strong iwth no grey,color is light brwn if your interested e-mail.

cool.

There is another site called OnlineHairAffair.com that you can sell your hair on also its basicly the same thing but better. Everything is put into an auction which creates a demand for your hair which drives the price up. They also have a feedback system in place to show users who really is serious about buying and selling hair. It's a pretty new site but so far it looks awesome and its taking over by storm. Check them out http://www.OnlineHairAffair.com

does anyone know anything about selling or donating dreadlocks! My boyfriend just joined the National Guard and will have to cut his 12 inch dreads off. anyone with info?

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