Why doesn't one treatment always work?
There are two reasons a single lice treatment might not fully resolve an infestation.
Reason 1: Surviving eggs (nits). Most lice treatments — including permethrin-based shampoos — don't reliably eliminate unhatched nits. Eggs that survive the first treatment hatch within 7–10 days. If you don't retreat before those hatchlings can lay new eggs (which takes about 9–12 days after hatching), the infestation continues.
Reason 2: Resistance. According to the CDC (2025), permethrin-resistant lice have been found in at least 42 U.S. states. In resistant lice populations, a single permethrin treatment may not eliminate even the live adult lice, let alone the eggs. A second application of a product that isn't working won't fix a resistance problem.
For a side-by-side look at which products perform better in resistance conditions, see our Nit Happens vs. Nix vs. RID comparison.
What does the retreatment data actually say?
| Treatment | After 1 Application | After 2 Applications | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Permethrin 1% (Nix) | ~15–55% lice-free | ~15–55% (minimal improvement due to resistance) | Burgess et al., 2013; Meinking et al., 2004–2010 |
| Pyrethrins + PBO (Rid) | 18–22% lice-free | 18–22% (similar resistance pattern) | Multiple peer-reviewed sources |
| Dimethicone (LiceMD, Vamousse) | ~70% lice-free | ~69–92% lice-free | Burgess et al., 2013; Heukelbach et al., 2008 |
| Nit Happens (physical removal) | 54% lice-free at Day 8 | 89% lice-free at Day 15 (intent-to-treat)¹ 95.8% per-protocol¹ |
Villar & Rivera, 2020 |
The Nit Happens numbers come from an IRB-approved clinical study (Villar & Rivera, 2020; n=26). After one treatment, 54% of participants were lice-free at Day 8. After a second treatment — administered only to participants who still had live lice at Day 8 — 89% of all participants were lice-free at Day 15. The per-protocol cure rate, which excludes two cases classified as re-infestations, was 95.8%.¹
When should the second treatment happen?
Timing matters. Treat too early and newly hatched nymphs may not be detectable yet. Treat too late and they'll have had time to mature and potentially lay new eggs. The standard recommendation across lice treatment guidelines is 7–10 days after the first treatment.
Apply per label instructions. Nit Happens mean application time: 47.5 minutes.
Part hair in sections under bright light. Focus on nape and behind ears. If live lice are present, retreat.
Only if live lice are still present. Nit Happens mean second-application time: 50 minutes.
Confirm lice-free. In the clinical study, 89% of participants reached this point clear.
Do you always need a second treatment?
No. About half of cases are resolved after a single treatment. In the Nit Happens clinical study, 54% of participants were lice-free at Day 8 with no second treatment needed. The second treatment is conditional — apply it only if live lice are still present.
How to check: after the first treatment, part the hair in sections under bright light. Focus on the nape of the neck and behind the ears. If you see any movement or find live lice, a second treatment is warranted.
What about a third treatment?
If lice are still present after two properly timed treatments, there are a few possible explanations:
- Re-infestation from a household member or school contact who wasn't treated
- Treatment resistance — most relevant for permethrin-based products
- Incomplete technique — lice treatment, particularly mechanical removal, requires thorough application and brushing to work
If two treatments haven't resolved the infestation, the AAP recommends consulting a pediatrician or a licensed lice treatment specialist. Switching treatment categories is often the right call at this point.
The bottom line
Most families need one to two treatments, timed about a week apart. The second treatment is conditional — only needed if live lice are still present after the first. Skipping the Day 7–8 head check is the most common reason a treatable infestation turns into a weeks-long ordeal. For products where resistance is a factor (permethrin, pyrethrins), a second application of the same product may not help — consider switching treatment types.
Sources
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Parasites — Lice — Head Lice: Treatment. cdc.gov. Updated 2025.
- American Academy of Pediatrics. Head Lice. Pediatrics. Updated 2023.
- Burgess IF, Brunton ER, Burgess NA. Single application of 4% dimeticone liquid gel versus two applications of 1% permethrin creme rinse. BMC Dermatology. 2013;13:5.
- Meinking TL, et al. Pediatric Dermatology. 2004;21(6):670–674.
- Villar ME, Rivera SR. H.A.L.T. Healthy Alternative Lice Treatment Study. IRB-approved by IntegReview IRB. December 3, 2020.