You finished a long lice treatment session, the comb is finally clear, and the kids are asleep. Then a quiet, awful thought hits: what if it did not actually work? Reinfestation is one of the most common worries Greater Washington parents bring to our chair, and the question sounds almost the same every time. How do we know it is really over? The answer is more concrete than most parents expect. There are specific signs to watch for in the first 24 hours, the first week, and the two-week mark, and there is a clear difference between normal post-treatment itching and a treatment that missed something. This walk-through covers what a successful lice treatment should look like, what should make you book a recheck, and how a professional clinic confirms the case is truly closed.
What Should You See Right After a Lice Treatment?
The first signal of a working treatment shows up in the comb, not on the scalp. After a thorough comb-out with a metal nit comb on wet, conditioned hair, the comb should pull out fewer and fewer specimens with each pass. By the final passes through the same section of hair, the comb should come out clean for several swipes in a row. That clean-comb endpoint is the single best confirmation that the visible infestation has been physically removed.
Right after a session, a few things are normal and not signs of failure. The scalp may still feel itchy for a couple of days because the body’s reaction to lice saliva does not switch off the moment the bugs are gone. You may find a stray dead louse in a brush or on a pillow for a day or two. You will almost certainly still see nits stuck to hair shafts, especially within a quarter inch of the scalp on the warm parts of the head behind the ears and at the nape of the neck. Nits are cemented to the hair with a glue-like substance and do not slide off the way dandruff does, so seeing them is not the same as seeing live activity.
What a Clean Final Comb-Out Should Look Like
On a finished case, a metal lice comb wiped on a white paper towel between passes should leave only conditioner residue and the occasional loose hair. No brown or tan moving specks, no soft cream-colored ovals fresh from the scalp. We section the head into small panels and recomb each one until two consecutive passes come back empty before we sign off. Parents doing this at home can borrow the same standard. If you are still pulling anything live or anything new and pearly at the root, the comb-out is not finished yet.
How Long Until You Can Tell if Lice Are Gone?
Confirmation comes in three checkpoints, and they are tied to the lice life cycle, not to a calendar. A louse egg laid the day before treatment is still inside its shell. Heat, suffocation methods, and most over-the-counter shampoos do not reliably kill every viable egg, which is why the first week matters so much. Newly hatched nymphs typically appear seven to ten days after the eggs were laid. If anything was missed, that is when it shows up.
- 24 to 72 hours after treatment: No live bugs in the comb, no new bites or red bumps appearing, scalp itching starting to settle.
- Day 7 to Day 10: A careful head check turns up no live lice and no new translucent eggs glued within a quarter inch of the scalp.
- Day 14 to Day 21: A second careful head check comes back clean. At this point any nits you still see are old, dried, and far from the scalp on hair that has grown out.
This is also why some Greater Washington parents tell us a drugstore kit “stopped working” around day eight. Most of the time the kit killed the adults but missed a percentage of the eggs, and a fresh wave of nymphs simply hatched on schedule. Knowing the timeline lets you plan a real recheck instead of guessing. If you used a professional treatment, mark a recheck on day seven and another on day fourteen on your calendar before you leave the appointment. If you treated at home, do the same. For more on the biology behind these checkpoints, see our breakdown of the lice life cycle and treatment timing.
What Are Signs Lice Treatment Did Not Fully Work?
Plenty of parents call us a week after a home treatment, sure something is off but unsure how to describe it. Three patterns almost always mean the case is not closed.
You Find a Live Louse Anytime After Day Three
One live, moving louse on day three or later is the clearest possible sign. Adult lice do not appear out of nowhere. Either an adult survived the first treatment, or an egg hatched and grew quickly. Either way, the case is active. A single bug in the brush five days out is not bad luck, it is data. Stop, reassess, and plan a thorough recomb on damp, conditioned hair the same day if you can.
Fresh Nits Keep Appearing Close to the Scalp
Nits laid by an active female are placed within roughly a quarter inch of the scalp because they need body heat to develop. Old nits left from before treatment will be farther out on the hair shaft and often look dull, flat, or empty. If you keep finding pearly, plump eggs glued right next to the skin a week or more after treatment, an adult is still laying. That is not a leftover, that is a live infestation. Our post on what lice eggs look like covers how to tell viable nits from old shells, dandruff, and product residue.
Itching Is Getting Worse, Not Better
Post-treatment itching should taper. If a child was scratching less by day three and is suddenly scratching more on day eight, take that seriously. New bites can trigger a fresh allergic reaction even when the head looks calmer than it did during the original infestation. Itching alone is not proof of failure, since some kids stay itchy for two weeks after a successful treatment, but worsening itching combined with anything else on this list is worth a recheck. We unpack the difference between true lice itching and other causes in why your head itches but you do not have lice.
Two more red flags worth naming. If a sibling who shared a pillow, hairbrush, or carseat headrest develops symptoms a week later, the original case probably was not contained at the household level. And if the same child keeps relapsing every two to three weeks, the issue is rarely the treatment product, it is missed eggs and unchecked close contacts. We cover that loop in detail in our piece on how to prevent lice from coming back after treatment.
How Do Lice Clinics Confirm Treatment Was Successful?
At Lice Lifters of Greater Washington, a confirmed-clear case is not a guess, it is a documented head check under bright clinical lighting. We section the hair into small panels, work from the scalp outward with a metal nit comb on conditioned strands, and check each panel for three things: live bugs, viable nits within a quarter inch of the scalp, and any cast skins or fresh debris that suggest recent activity. The same protocol is used on the day of treatment and again at the follow-up.
Two clean head checks, scheduled to land on opposite sides of the lice life cycle, are the standard we use to call a case closed. The first follow-up sits inside the first week to catch anything an adult may have laid right before treatment. The second sits closer to the two-week mark to catch anything that hatched late. If either visit turns up something active, we treat that day and reset the clock. Parents leave with notes on what we found, where on the head we found it, and what the household should do next.
Outside the clinic, the confirmation tools are the same, just smaller scale. A bright lamp, a metal lice comb, white paper towels, and a quiet child for fifteen minutes per panel will get you most of the way there. The piece that is hardest to replicate at home is the second set of trained eyes, which is why families dealing with long, thick, or textured hair, multiple kids, or a third recurrence often book a screening with us instead of running another self-check. If you want to see the comb-out workflow in detail, our walkthrough of professional lice comb-out tools shows what the equipment does and why the comb itself matters more than the product on the bottle.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many days after lice treatment am I safe?
Most families are in the clear after two clean head checks: one at day seven to ten and another at day fourteen to twenty-one. Those checkpoints cover the lice life cycle so any egg that survived has time to hatch and be caught before it can lay again.
Is it normal to still see nits after treatment?
Yes. Nits are cemented to the hair shaft and do not fall off on their own. Old empty shells can stay glued to the hair for weeks until they grow out. The question to ask is whether the nits you see are far from the scalp and dull or right at the root and shiny.
Can my child go back to school the next day?
Most schools across Montgomery County and the District of Columbia allow students back the next day after a thorough professional treatment. Policies vary by school, so check the nurse’s office, but a documented clinic visit usually satisfies the no-live-lice requirement.
Why is my scalp still itchy if the lice are gone?
Itching can persist for one to two weeks after a successful treatment because the immune response to lice saliva keeps going for a while. As long as no live bugs are turning up in the comb and no new shiny nits are appearing at the scalp, leftover itching alone is not a sign that treatment failed.
Should the whole family be checked after one case?
Yes. Anyone who shared a pillow, brush, hat, or carseat headrest in the last several weeks should get a head check, even adults. A missed case in one family member is the most common reason a treatment seems to fail later.
When should I book a professional follow-up screening?
Book a screening any time you find a live louse after day three, see fresh shiny nits glued near the scalp a week after treatment, or face a third repeat case in a single household. You can request a screening at our appointments page.
Still Not Sure It Worked?
If you are reading this at midnight, second-guessing what you just pulled out of the comb, you do not have to wait until morning to feel certain. Our team in Greater Washington runs head checks and follow-up screenings every day, and a fifteen-minute clinical look is usually all it takes to confirm a clear case or catch what was missed. Visit our treatment options page, check our FAQs, or book a same-week appointment at liceliftersgreaterwashington.com/appointments.