Quick reference: lice treatments by age
| Age Group | Permethrin (Nix) | Pyrethrins (RID) | Ivermectin (Sklice) | Dimethicone | Nit Happens |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Under 6 months | ❌ Not approved | ❌ Not approved | ❌ Not approved | Consult pediatrician | Consult pediatrician |
| 6 months – 2 years | ❌ Not approved | ❌ Not approved | ✅ Approved (6 mo+) | Consult first | Consult; no chemical actives |
| 2–5 years (toddlers) | ✅ Approved 2+ | ✅ Approved 2+ | ✅ Approved | ✅ Generally appropriate | ✅ No pharmaceutical restrictions |
| 6–12 years | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| 13–17 years | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
| Eczema / sensitive skin (any age) | ⚠ Caution | ⚠ Caution | Consult doctor | Patch test first | ✅ Preferred first-line |
| Pregnancy / nursing | Consult OB | Consult OB | Consult OB | Consult OB | Lower chemical exposure |
Toddlers (ages 2–5): what to know
Toddlers are where most lice treatment questions get complicated. They're old enough for most OTC treatments by FDA approval, but their scalps and skin barriers are more sensitive than older children, and they're less able to tolerate the smell or sensation of chemical treatments.
The most important factor: scalp condition. If your toddler has eczema, cradle cap, or any open skin on the scalp, pesticide-based shampoos should be avoided. A physical-removal treatment with no chemical actives is the safer first-line option.
Treatment time is the second factor. Nit Happens requires 15–30 minutes of active brushing. For a squirmy toddler, that takes patience — set up a tablet with their favorite show, have treats ready, and plan for the full window.
According to the AAP (2023), lice treatment should not be withheld in young children because the risk of untreated infestation (skin breakdown from scratching, secondary bacterial infection) outweighs the low risk of properly applied topical treatments.
For toddlers with sensitive skin, see our dedicated guide: Is Lice Treatment Safe for Kids with Eczema or Sensitive Skin?
School-age kids (ages 6–12): what to know
This is peak lice season. School-age children account for the vast majority of lice infestations, and the back-to-school window (August–October) and post-holiday return (January) are the highest-transmission periods. The CDC estimates 6–12 million cases of lice occur annually in children ages 3–11 in the United States.
For school-age kids, all major lice treatment categories are approved and appropriate. The most important decision factor is whether conventional treatments have failed before.
If your child had lice in the past and Nix or RID didn't work, that's a strong signal that your local lice population carries the knockdown resistance mutation. Switching to a pesticide-free mechanical treatment or a dimethicone-based treatment is more likely to succeed than another round of permethrin.
Teens (ages 13–17): what to know
Teens are a lower-risk group for lice overall — head-to-head contact is less common — but lice do occur, especially among teen athletes in contact sports (wrestling, football) and at slumber parties or festivals.
All treatment options are approved for teens. The key difference: teens are more self-conscious and may resist the extended brushing time that physical-removal treatments require. Frame it practically — the brush-out is what makes it work, and 40 minutes of treatment once is better than a week of repeat shampooing that doesn't resolve the infestation.
For teen girls with long, thick hair: mechanical removal treatments are more time-intensive on longer hair. The Nit Happens mean treatment time in the clinical study was 47.5 minutes (range 33–56 minutes) for the first application and 50 minutes for the second.¹ Plan for the upper end of that range with very long or dense hair.
What about infants under 2?
Lice in infants under 2 are uncommon but not impossible. If you find lice on a child under 2:
- Under 6 months: Do not use any OTC lice treatment without direct pediatrician guidance. Manual nit removal (wet combing with a fine-toothed lice comb) is the recommended first step.
- 6 months to 2 years: Ivermectin lotion (Sklice) is FDA-approved from 6 months. Pesticide-free options without pharmaceutical age minimums are also appropriate under pediatrician guidance.
What about pregnant or nursing parents?
If a nursing or pregnant parent is infested — or is treating a child and wants to minimize their own chemical exposure — pesticide-free treatments are a meaningful option. The safety of permethrin and pyrethrins during pregnancy has not been fully studied. While current evidence does not suggest major risk, many providers recommend minimizing unnecessary topical chemical exposure during pregnancy as a precaution. Consult your OB before using any lice treatment during pregnancy.
The treatment technique matters as much as the product
Regardless of age or product chosen, improper technique is the most common reason treatment fails. For any mechanical or chemical treatment:
- Saturate hair completely from scalp to ends
- Follow timing instructions exactly — don't rinse early
- Retreat 7–10 days later if live lice are still present (see One Treatment or Two?)
- Treat all household members with confirmed active infestations simultaneously
The bottom line
Lice treatment options vary by age, but there's an effective choice available for every age group from 6 months up. For toddlers and children with sensitive skin, a pesticide-free mechanical treatment is the recommended first-line option. For any age group where conventional treatments have failed before, switching treatment categories usually works better than repeating the same product.
Sources
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Parasites — Lice — Head Lice: Treatment. cdc.gov. Updated 2025.
- American Academy of Pediatrics. Head Lice. HealthyChildren.org. Updated 2023.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration. FDA Approves Lotion for Nonprescription Use to Treat Head Lice (Sklice OTC approval). fda.gov.
- Pariser DM, et al. Topical 0.5% Ivermectin Lotion for Treatment of Head Lice. New England Journal of Medicine. 2012;367(18):1687–1693.
- Villar ME, Rivera SR. H.A.L.T. Healthy Alternative Lice Treatment Study. IRB-approved by IntegReview IRB. December 3, 2020.