If you have already treated your child for head lice and you are still spotting tiny tan specks glued near the scalp, you are not imagining it. Lice eggs, called nits, are built to survive the things parents reach for first: hot showers, daily shampoo, even most over-the-counter lice products. The eggs are cemented to the hair shaft, sealed inside a tough outer shell, and incubating quietly until they hatch in about a week. That is why a single round of medicated shampoo so often fails. Killing the eggs is the part of lice treatment most people get wrong, and it is the part that decides whether the infestation is really over.
This guide walks through what actually kills nits, what does not, how to remove the ones treatment leaves behind, and how to tell when your child is finally clear. The advice reflects how we handle eggs in our Silver Spring salon every day, and where we usually see at-home efforts go sideways.
Why Are Lice Eggs So Hard to Kill?
Adult lice are fragile. A good comb-out, a hot wash on a hat, or a strong professional shampoo will usually finish off the live bugs you can see. The eggs are a different problem. The female lice glues each nit to a single strand of hair using a protein cement that does not dissolve in water, conditioner, or routine shampoo. That cement is why nits do not slide off in the shower the way dandruff or hair product residue does.
The egg itself is also armored. Each nit has a hard outer casing called a chorion, with a small breathing structure at the top. That casing is what makes most “ovicidal” claims on drugstore boxes shaky. Many active ingredients reach the live bug just fine but cannot fully penetrate the egg shell. The result is an egg that looks dead, sometimes even discolors, and still hatches a viable louse a few days later. If you want to understand what those eggs look like at the scalp before you try to remove them, our walk-through on identifying lice eggs shows the exact size, color, and placement to look for.
The third issue is timing. A nit takes 7 to 10 days to hatch. If you treat once and stop, any egg the product missed becomes a brand-new louse that is then old enough to lay its own eggs in another 9 to 12 days. That gap is exactly where most home treatments break down. Parents see no live bugs on day three, assume they are done, and then find a fresh infestation by day twelve.
What Actually Kills Lice Eggs?
The honest answer is that nothing you can buy over the counter reliably kills 100 percent of lice eggs in one application. That is not a scare tactic, it is what the chemistry shows. Knowing what each option does, and what it does not, helps you build a plan that does not leave eggs behind.
Heat
Sustained temperatures above 130 degrees Fahrenheit will kill nits. That works for laundry, hats, hair ties, and pillowcases on a hot dryer cycle. It does not work on a child’s scalp. A flat iron can technically destroy the eggs it touches, but you cannot iron a whole head down to the root without burning skin or breaking hair. Heat is a useful tool for the environment around the head, not the head itself.
Smothering Agents
Olive oil, mayonnaise, and petroleum jelly are popular home remedies because they are cheap and feel safe. They can suffocate adult lice if they sit on the head long enough under a shower cap, usually six to eight hours. Eggs are a much harder target. The breathing pore on a nit is small, and oil-based kitchen-cabinet home remedies do not always seal it completely. Smothering buys you time on adult bugs and slows the cycle. It does not finish the eggs.
Over-the-Counter Lice Shampoos
Most drugstore lice products use permethrin or pyrethrin. These were genuinely effective decades ago. Today, many lice populations in the United States have developed resistance, which is what the term “super lice” really refers to. Even when these products kill the adults, their effect on eggs is partial at best. The label often instructs a second application 7 to 9 days later for that exact reason: the manufacturer is assuming missed eggs will hatch and need a second round of chemistry.
Prescription Treatments
Pediatricians sometimes prescribe spinosad, ivermectin lotion, or malathion for stubborn cases. Spinosad and ivermectin lotion are stronger options against eggs than older over-the-counter actives, but no prescription product guarantees a 100 percent egg kill on a single application either. They also need a prescription, an appointment, and often a follow-up visit.
The Reliable Approach
The combination that consistently ends an infestation in our salon is professional Lice Lifters treatment paired with the Lice Lifters Products line and a thorough manual nit comb-out. The treatment kills the live bugs and weakens the cement holding the nits in place. The comb-out, done section by section under bright light, physically removes the eggs that any product, prescription or otherwise, would otherwise leave behind. Without that manual step, you are gambling on whatever percentage of eggs the chemistry happened to penetrate.
How Do You Remove Nits Manually?
Manual nit removal is slow, methodical work. It is also non-negotiable if you want to be done in one round instead of three. The goal is to physically pull every visible egg off every strand of hair, especially within a quarter inch of the scalp where new nits are laid.
Set Up Before You Start
You need a metal fine-tooth nit comb (plastic combs flex too much and miss nits), a stack of paper towels, hair clips to section the hair, a generous amount of cheap conditioner to coat the strands, and bright light. Daylight near a window or a strong overhead lamp works better than typical bathroom lighting. Plan on 60 to 90 minutes for medium hair, longer for thick or curly hair, and have a tablet or show ready because the child has to sit still.
Section, Comb, Wipe, Repeat
Saturate the hair with conditioner so the comb glides. Section the head into small one-inch divisions and clip the rest out of the way. Starting at the scalp, comb each section all the way to the ends. Wipe the comb on a paper towel after every single pass and check the towel for nits or live bugs. If you see eggs you cannot dislodge with the comb, slide them off with your fingernails along the hair shaft. Move to the next section only when the current one comes back clean for three passes in a row.
Repeat the Whole Head
Repeat the entire combing session every two to three days for at least two weeks. This is the part most parents skip, and it is the reason at-home efforts loop endlessly. Even the best comb-out misses some eggs the first time. By spacing sessions every two to three days for two weeks, you catch any egg that hatches before it can lay new ones. If this sounds like a lot, that is honest. Families who would rather not spend their evenings combing book a full salon-based lice removal session and have it handled in one sitting with a professional follow-up plan.
How Do You Know All the Eggs Are Dead?
You cannot stare at a nit and tell whether it will hatch. The color cues people repeat online (tan equals alive, white equals empty) are not as reliable as they sound. Empty egg casings stay glued to hair for weeks even after the louse has emerged, and viable nits can look pale under bad lighting. The only honest way to confirm the eggs are gone is to track the next two weeks for new bugs.
Do a careful daily check for the first 14 days after treatment, paying close attention on days 7 through 10 because that is when any missed eggs would hatch into crawling lice. If you find a live bug during that window, the round failed and you need to start the treatment cycle over. If you find new nits attached within a quarter inch of the scalp, that is also a sign of an active infestation, not leftovers. Old, empty casings drift out toward the ends of the hair as it grows, so anything close to the scalp is fresh. Running day-by-day checks to confirm the treatment finished the job is the only way to be certain you are looking at empty casings instead of a slow restart.
You can call the case closed when you go a full 14 days with no live bugs and no new nits at the scalp. Until you hit that mark, treat every day like the infestation is still active.
When Should You Get Professional Help With Nits?
A first round at home can be reasonable when the infestation is caught early, the hair is short or fine, and a parent has the time to commit to two weeks of careful combing. There are situations where DIY is the wrong tool for the job, and trying to push through it usually wastes more time than booking a professional appointment from the start.
Consider professional help when any of these are true. Two at-home rounds have already failed. Multiple family members are infested at the same time. The hair is very long, very thick, very curly, or hard to section. The child cannot sit still long enough for a thorough comb-out. The household has been through a re-infestation cycle already. Or the people involved are simply done and need it handled.
At our Silver Spring salon, a full appointment includes a head check on every family member, a professional treatment that targets both the live bugs and the egg cement, a complete strand-by-strand comb-out, and a take-home plan with the Lice Lifters product line for follow-up screenings. Most appointments wrap in a single sitting, and we do not send anyone home with viable eggs still on the head. If you are weighing whether to tackle it yourself again or come in, the calculus is usually about how many more nights of combing you are willing to spend.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take for lice eggs to hatch?
Lice eggs hatch about 7 to 10 days after they are laid. The newly hatched nymph is too small to see easily but can grow into an adult egg-laying louse in another 9 to 12 days. That two-week window is why a single round of treatment without follow-up combing so often fails.
Can lice eggs hatch after the adult lice are gone?
Yes. Adult lice and nits are independent. If a treatment kills the live bugs but does not destroy the eggs, the eggs will keep developing and hatch on their own schedule. That is why removing the eggs is just as important as treating the adults.
Does daily shampoo kill lice eggs?
No. Regular shampoo, even daily use, does not kill lice eggs and does not dissolve the protein cement that holds them to the hair. Clean hair and dirty hair are equally vulnerable, which is one reason lice are so common in households with strong hygiene routines.
Can vinegar dissolve nits off the hair?
Vinegar is sometimes recommended as a way to loosen the cement that holds nits to hair. In practice, the effect is mild and inconsistent, and it does not kill the eggs themselves. A long conditioner soak followed by careful combing with a metal nit comb removes more eggs than a vinegar rinse on its own.
How small are lice eggs compared to dandruff?
Lice eggs are about the size of a poppy seed, oval, and tan or yellowish-brown when alive. Dandruff is irregular, white, and flakes off easily. The fastest way to tell the two apart is to try to flick the speck off the hair. Dandruff brushes off. A nit will not move because it is glued to the strand.
Should you cut your child’s hair to get rid of lice eggs?
Cutting hair is not necessary to clear an infestation. Lice eggs are laid within a quarter inch of the scalp, so a haircut would have to be very short to physically remove them. A thorough comb-out works on hair of any length, and most families would rather spend the time combing than reshape their child’s hair over a temporary problem.
Is it normal to still see nits a week after treatment?
Empty egg casings can stay glued to hair for weeks after the louse inside has hatched or died. The question to ask is where they are sitting. New, viable nits are within a quarter inch of the scalp. Old casings drift outward as the hair grows. If the only specks you see are well away from the scalp, the infestation is most likely already over.
If you have already gone a round or two with at-home products and the eggs keep coming back, that is the moment to bring in a professional. Call our Silver Spring salon to book a head check and get a treatment plan that finishes the cycle in one visit instead of stretching it across the rest of the month.