Maybe your child has been scratching their head all evening. Maybe the school just sent a note saying lice were found in the classroom. Maybe a sibling had it last month and now another one is twitchy. The first instinct is usually a fast visual scan, a few minutes of staring, and a question that no one wants to answer: is this real, or is this nothing?
A proper at-home lice check is not a 60-second look. It is a careful, well-lit pass through small sections of hair with a fine-tooth comb, and it answers a very specific question: are there live bugs or freshly laid eggs on this scalp right now? When you do it correctly, you will know within twenty minutes whether you are dealing with active head lice, an old hatched infestation, or something else entirely. Here is exactly what a real check looks like, what tools matter, and what to do with what you find.
What Should You Look For During a Lice Check?
Three things tell you it is head lice: live insects, viable nits, or both. Each looks different, and it helps to know what each one looks like before the comb ever touches the hair.
Live Lice and Nymphs
Adult head lice are about the size of a sesame seed, roughly 2 to 3 millimeters long, with six legs and a tan to grayish color that often picks up the shade of the surrounding hair. Nymphs (newly hatched lice that have not yet matured) are smaller and paler, but still visible to the naked eye. Both move. Both run from direct light, which is why bugs are easier to find when you part the hair quickly under a strong lamp than when you scan slowly in dim lighting. They do not jump and they do not fly. They crawl, fast, mostly along the hair shaft and the warm zones near the scalp.
Nits and What They Look Like Up Close
Nits are head-lice eggs glued to the side of a single hair strand. They are tear-shaped, yellowish-white to tan, and stuck so firmly that they do not slide along the shaft when you push them with a fingernail, which is the single most reliable way to tell a nit from dandruff or product residue. Viable, freshly laid nits sit within a quarter inch of the scalp because that is the warmth and humidity zone they need to develop. Old nits that have already hatched can be found further down the hair, often an inch or more from the scalp, and they appear hollow or whitish. The most useful close-up reference is nits up close, which shows the angle, color, and shape distinction in detail.
Where on the Head to Focus
Head lice prefer warm, sheltered spots: behind both ears, the nape of the neck just above the hairline, and the crown at the top of the head. If you are short on time and can only check three areas, those are the three. They cluster, so if you find one nit in any of those spots, slow down and check the entire surrounding section before moving on.
What Do You Need to Do a Lice Check at Home?
A real lice check needs more than your eyes. Most parents who say “I looked and didn’t see anything” looked under the wrong light, with the wrong tool, in the wrong spots. Five things change the accuracy of a home check more than anything else.
The Five Tools That Actually Matter
- A fine-tooth metal nit comb. Plastic combs and regular detangling brushes have teeth that are too far apart to catch nits or small nymphs. Metal nit combs are the standard tool used by professionals because the tightly spaced metal teeth catch what plastic misses.
- Bright, direct light. Outdoor sunlight on a cloudless afternoon is the gold standard. Indoors, use the brightest lamp in the house and position it directly above the section you are working on, not behind you.
- White paper towel or white cloth. After every comb pass, you will wipe the comb on this surface to inspect what came out. Anything dark on white shows up immediately.
- Hair clips or sectioning ties. You will work in small sections, no more than about an inch wide, so the rest of the hair needs to stay out of the way.
- Plenty of conditioner. A generous coat of conditioner on damp hair slows live lice down (they cannot grip wet, slick hair the way they grip dry hair) and lets the comb glide cleanly from root to tip.
A Magnifying Glass Helps With Fine, Blonde, or Very Thick Hair
Pale lice and pale nits camouflage against blonde hair. Curly and very thick hair hides bugs deep against the scalp. A standard 2x magnifying glass under a strong light makes both situations significantly easier, and it is the single cheapest piece of equipment that improves accuracy the most.
How Do You Check the Hair Step by Step?
Plan on fifteen to twenty minutes per child for a thorough pass. Rushing is the most common reason at-home checks miss active infestations.
Setting Up
Sit the child on a chair in front of you with a strong light overhead. Detangle gently with a regular brush first, then apply a heavy layer of conditioner to damp (not soaking) hair from scalp to ends. Section the hair into four quadrants, top-left, top-right, bottom-left, and bottom-right, using clips. You will work one section at a time.
The Combing Pass
Take a strand of hair no wider than a half-inch from the section you are working on. Place the metal nit comb flat against the scalp at the root, and pull it slowly through the hair from root to tip in one steady motion. After each pass, wipe the comb thoroughly on the white paper towel and inspect what came out. You are looking for live bugs (which will likely be moving), nits stuck to hair, or anything tan and sesame-seed shaped on the white surface. Repeat through every strand of every quadrant. Do not skip the area directly behind the ears or the nape of the neck, those are the highest-yield spots.
What the Result Tells You
There are three possible outcomes once you have worked through every section.
- You see live, moving bugs. Active lice infestation, currently shedding eggs.
- You see no live bugs, but multiple nits stuck within a quarter inch of the scalp. Active infestation in the early stage. Eggs are present and hatching is imminent.
- You see no live bugs and only a few isolated white specks farther than an inch down the hair shaft. Likely an old, hatched, no-longer-active infestation, but worth a second pass and a follow-up check in seven to ten days to confirm.
How Do You Tell Lice From Dandruff or Other Lookalikes?
Most parents who think they see lice are looking at one of four lookalikes. The slide test settles every one of them.
The Single Test That Rules Out Most False Alarms
Pick the suspect speck with your fingertips and try to slide it down the hair shaft toward the tip. A nit will not move. The glue is essentially permanent until you scrape it off. If it slides, it is not a nit.
The Four Most Common Lookalikes
- Dandruff. Flakes off freely, sometimes in clumps, and sits loose on the scalp rather than glued to a strand.
- Hair product residue. Leave-in conditioner, dry shampoo, mousse, and styling cream can dry into white specks that look identical to nits at a glance, but they coat strands evenly and wipe off easily.
- Hair casts (also called pseudo-nits). A thin tubular sheath that wraps all the way around a hair strand and slides freely up and down. They look like nits but lack the tear-shape and one-sided attachment.
- DEC plugs. Small white round dots from dried scalp oil and dead skin cells. Round, not tear-shaped, and they sit at the surface of the scalp rather than gripping a hair strand.
If your child’s scalp is itchy and a careful comb-through turns up nothing, the cause is usually somewhere in this list. There is a separate, calmer story for an itchy scalp without lice, and it usually involves dry skin, sensitivity to a new product, or seasonal scalp irritation rather than an active infestation.
The point of an at-home check is not to play exterminator. It is to figure out, with high confidence, whether you are looking at lice or not. If a slow, well-lit comb-through with the right tools turns up live bugs or freshly laid nits within a quarter inch of the scalp, that is your answer. From there, you can pull conditioner, an over-the-counter product, or a professional lice removal appointment into the plan, depending on how comfortable you are doing the comb-out yourself. For families across Silver Spring and the surrounding Montgomery County area, a same-day in-clinic screening is a fast way to confirm or rule out an infestation in one visit, especially when more than one person at home is itchy at the same time.
Frequently Asked Questions About Checking for Head Lice
How long does an at-home lice check usually take?
A thorough check on a child with average hair runs about fifteen to twenty minutes if you section properly and comb every strand. Very thick or long hair adds five to ten minutes. Quicker visual-only scans miss active lice often enough that they are not a reliable substitute.
Can lice hide if my child has thick or curly hair?
They can hide more easily, yes. Thick, curly, or coiled hair gives lice and nits more cover and more places to grip. Working in smaller sections, using extra conditioner to relax the curl pattern, and adding a magnifying glass usually closes the accuracy gap.
Do a few nits always mean an active lice infestation?
Not always. If the only nits you find are well over an inch from the scalp and are hollow or whitish, those are old hatched cases from a previous infestation and the lice may already be gone. Active cases produce nits within a quarter inch of the scalp, where the warmth is right for development. Either way, a second check in seven to ten days confirms the answer.
What is the best lighting for checking for head lice?
Direct outdoor sunlight is the most reliable, followed by a strong overhead indoor lamp positioned above the section being checked. Avoid overhead fluorescent lighting alone, since it casts a flat blue tone that washes out the tan and yellow shades you are scanning for.
Should adults in the house get checked too?
If a child has confirmed lice, every person in the home who shares a bed, headrest, or close head-to-head contact should be checked the same day. Lice spread through head-to-head contact, and adults pick them up and pass them along the same way children do.
When should I stop checking at home and call a professional?
Two situations warrant a call. The first is when you are not confident in what you are seeing after a careful pass. The second is when you have done the comb-through and confirmed lice but the scope of the infestation feels too large to handle at home, such as multiple family members, very thick hair, or a child who will not sit still for the time required. A professional comb-out clinic finishes the job in one appointment in either case.