If you have spotted lice on your child and grabbed a bottle of Nix or RID off the drugstore shelf, you probably want the answer to the same question every parent asks at that moment: is this stuff actually going to work? Lice shampoos are sold like silver bullets. The reality is more complicated. They use real pesticides, they kill many live bugs on contact, and they leave a long list of things they cannot do.
Understanding how these products actually work, where they fall short, and what has to happen alongside them is the difference between a single panicked weekend and a three-week reinfestation cycle. Here is a plain-English breakdown of what is in the bottle, why one application is rarely enough, when shampoo stops working at all, and the comb-out routine that has to happen no matter which product you pick.
What Is Lice Shampoo Actually Made Of?
Most over-the-counter lice shampoos sold in the United States rely on one of two pesticide families. The first is pyrethrins (the active ingredient in RID and similar drugstore brands), which are natural compounds extracted from chrysanthemum flowers and almost always combined with a synergist called piperonyl butoxide that helps the pyrethrins stay active longer on the scalp. The second is permethrin 1% (the active ingredient in Nix), a synthetic version of pyrethrins designed to be more stable and to keep working a little longer after the rinse.
Both families work the same way at the cellular level: they bind to sodium channels in the lice nervous system and force the channels to stay open, which causes paralysis and eventually kills the bug. Permethrin tends to leave a small residual on the hair after rinsing, which is why the box recommends not shampooing again for a day or two. In a real comb-out the difference between pyrethrins and permethrin is rarely the deciding factor on whether a case clears.
There are stronger prescription options like ivermectin lotion (Sklice) and spinosad (Natroba), and there are non-pesticide approaches that work mechanically by suffocating or dehydrating lice. But when most parents say “lice shampoo,” they mean a permethrin or pyrethrin product from the drugstore, and that is what this article is about. If you do go that route, it helps to know what a successful treatment cycle should actually look like at the end so you can tell the difference between a real clearance and an active case in remission.
Why Doesn’t One Round of Lice Shampoo Get Rid of Lice?
This is the single biggest reason drugstore products get blamed for “not working.” It is technically true that a thorough application of permethrin or pyrethrin shampoo kills most live, mature bugs on contact. What it rarely does is kill the eggs.
Lice eggs (called nits) are glued to the hair shaft inside a tough protein casing. Pyrethrins have very limited ability to penetrate that shell, especially in eggs that are still in their first few days. So even after a perfect first wash, you have a head full of dead bugs and a head full of intact eggs that are still very much alive on the strand.
Those eggs hatch over the next 7 to 10 days. By the time the second wash is recommended (usually day 7 to day 9 on the box), a new generation of nymphs has already started to emerge. If you skip the second application, that new generation matures and starts laying its own eggs within about a week, and the family is right back where it started.
That is why the package always specifies a second treatment, and why missing it is one of the most common mistakes parents make. Knowing how to tell active eggs from empty hatched casings is also useful at this stage, because eggs that are dark and within a quarter inch of the scalp are alive, while pale shells further down the strand are usually empty and were never going to be killed by any shampoo.
When Does Lice Shampoo Stop Killing the Bugs at All?
Even with a perfect two-wash schedule, a meaningful share of cases still fail. The reason is resistance. Decades of widespread permethrin and pyrethrin use in the United States have produced lice populations that carry a genetic mutation, often called knockdown resistance, that lets the bug survive doses that used to kill it on contact.
Studies sampling lice from across the country have found resistance rates ranging from roughly 50% in some regions to over 95% in others. Maryland and the broader Mid-Atlantic are not immune. Parents in our service area regularly come in after two full rounds of Nix or RID with live, crawling bugs still on the scalp.
If you have done two correctly timed applications, combed thoroughly between them, and you are still finding live bugs more than 24 hours after the second wash, the most likely explanation is not user error. It is that the lice you are dealing with are genetically resistant to the pesticide in your bottle. The dynamics behind treatment-resistant strains and how that changes the playbook are worth reading before you spend money on a third bottle of the same product.
Doubling down on the same active ingredient rarely solves the problem. Once a strain has knockdown resistance, repeating that pesticide is just irritating the scalp without changing the outcome. The next move is either a switch to a non-pesticide mechanical approach or a professional treatment with a different active ingredient and a thorough comb-out by a trained technician.
What Has to Happen Alongside the Shampoo?
Even when the shampoo is killing bugs as advertised, it is only one piece of the work. The other piece is removing every nit from the hair, and no shampoo on the market does that for you.
Manual nit removal with a high-quality metal lice comb is what actually breaks the cycle. The technique matters: dry hair tangles around the comb and pulls eggs sideways instead of off, but hair that is wet and saturated with conditioner allows the teeth to slide cleanly down each strand and lift eggs off without breaking them. The metal-comb technique that actually lifts nits off the shaft is what you want to follow if you have not done it before.
A reasonable home protocol after an OTC shampoo treatment looks like this:
- Rinse the shampoo per the bottle directions, then towel dry the hair.
- Saturate the hair with white conditioner and let it sit for a few minutes before combing.
- Section hair into 1-inch pieces and comb each section from scalp to tip until two clean passes turn up nothing.
- Wipe the comb on a folded paper towel between strokes and seal used towels in a bag for the outdoor trash.
- Repeat the full comb-out every 2 to 3 days for two weeks, even if no live bugs are visible.
- Re-apply the shampoo on day 7 to 9 as the package directs, even if the head appears clear.
Skipping any one of these steps is the most common reason a treatment “fails.” It is rarely the bottle that failed. It is usually the comb-out that did not happen, did not happen often enough, or did not happen on wet, conditioner-saturated hair.
When Should You Skip the Drugstore Aisle and Call a Professional?
There are real cases where over-the-counter shampoo is the right first step, and there are cases where it is just delaying the inevitable. The honest answer for most families is: try one careful round of permethrin or pyrethrin with a real comb-out, and if you are still finding live bugs after the second treatment, stop reapplying and change approach.
It is worth skipping straight to a professional treatment when:
- Two full pyrethrin or permethrin cycles have not cleared the infestation.
- The case has been active for more than two weeks.
- Multiple family members are affected, especially adults whose hair is harder to comb thoroughly at home.
- Your child has long, thick, or curly hair that makes a 90-minute home comb-out unrealistic.
- You have already tried a home remedy like mayonnaise or olive oil and the case is still active.
- Anyone in the household is immunocompromised or sensitive to repeat pesticide exposure.
A professional comb-out done by trained technicians is what closes the loop on a stubborn case, and it does it without putting another round of pesticide on a scalp that has already had two. If you are anywhere from Silver Spring out through the Greater Washington and Montgomery County area and your home approach is not getting you there, in-clinic professional lice screening and removal is the option to lean on next. Bring the whole family in for a check at the same time. Lice spread inside households quickly, and clearing only one head usually means a return visit within two weeks.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does lice shampoo kill the eggs too?
Most over-the-counter lice shampoos kill live bugs but do not reliably kill nits. The egg’s protein shell blocks the active ingredient from reaching the developing louse inside. Eggs that survive hatch within 7 to 10 days, which is why a second application and manual nit removal are both required to break the cycle.
How long should I leave the shampoo on the hair?
Permethrin (Nix) is typically left on for 10 minutes; most pyrethrin products (RID and similar) are also 10 minutes. Always follow the bottle directions for your specific product. Leaving it on longer does not improve results and can irritate the scalp, especially on younger children.
Can I use lice shampoo as a preventive wash?
No. Pyrethrins and permethrin lose their effectiveness within hours of rinsing, and using them when no infestation is present is one of the textbook drivers of the resistance problem we are now living with. If you are worried about exposure, do a careful scalp check instead and only treat if you actually find live bugs or fresh eggs near the scalp.
Why are there still live bugs after the second wash?
The two most common reasons are pesticide resistance and missing the second application. If 24 hours after a correctly timed second wash you are still seeing live, crawling bugs, the strain you are dealing with is most likely resistant and a different approach is needed. A third round of the same shampoo will not produce a different result.
Is permethrin or pyrethrin shampoo safe for young children?
Permethrin 1% is generally considered safe for children 2 months and older when used as directed. Pyrethrin products are typically labeled for ages 2 and up. Children with broken skin on the scalp, asthma, or chrysanthemum or ragweed allergies should not use pyrethrins without first checking with a pediatrician.
Does washing hair with regular shampoo every day prevent lice?
No. Lice cling tightly to the hair shaft and are not washed away by routine shampooing or bathing. Daily hair-washing has no preventive effect on head lice and is not a substitute for combing or scalp checks during an active outbreak at school or in the household.
What should I do if two rounds of lice shampoo do not work?
Stop reapplying the same product. Repeating the same active ingredient on resistant lice will not produce a different outcome. The next step is either a switch to a non-pesticide mechanical approach or a professional treatment that combines a fresh active ingredient with a thorough comb-out by a trained technician.