Hair Restoration
Biotin 10,000 mcg Supplement
A high-dose 10,000 mcg biotin capsule — a building block for the keratin in hair shafts. Designed to support an active hair-loss plan, not replace one.

One dose. One molecule.
Biotin 10,000 mcg Supplement pairs Biotin 10,000 mcg in a oral capsule taken as one daily routine.
- B
Biotin
- I
Biotin
Keratin cofactor · structural support
100%of mixDose10,000 mcg
Compounded formulas are made for one patient at a time and are not FDA-approved as finished products.
Hair grows on its own schedule.
The best hair-loss plan is the one you actually follow long enough to judge. The biology runs on months, not days — here is what the road usually looks like.

Week 0
You start
pick a daily cue

Week 4–8
Early shed
looks worse, isn't

Week 12
First photo check
same light, same angle

Week 24+
Fair verdict
is the plan working
What 6 months tends to look like
- 1Month 1
No visible change yet. Just keep the daily cue going.
- 2Month 3
Shedding settles. Some shafts feel thicker at the root.
- 3Month 6
First honest check of whether this plan is the right fit.
Illustrative only. Individual timing, shedding patterns, and overall response vary by person and pattern.
Commit longer, pay less per month.
Pay every 4 weeks at the rolling rate, or commit to 12 or 24 weeks and the per-month price drops. Cash or insurance — your call.
Cancel or pause anytime
A prescription is not guaranteed — a clinician reviews fit first. You can pause or adjust your plan with your care team at any time.
Support, or active treatment?
Biotin alone is a supplement, not a hair-loss treatment. Reviewed for fit alongside an active plan — not in place of one. Useful when keratin building blocks are part of the story.
Minoxidil + Biotin + Nutrients Oral (Female)
Biotin paired with minoxidil and a nutrient blend, female-eligible.
NextGen Oral (Male)
NextGen oral with biotin alongside minoxidil and finasteride.
A visit. A script. A routine.
01Tell us your pattern.
A short online intake covers where you are thinning, when it started, what you have already tried, and everything you are currently taking.
02A real clinician reviews it.
A U.S.-licensed clinician checks your history against sex-specific safety, medications, and which route fits best — before anything is written.
03Ships discreetly if prescribed.
If a prescription is the right call, your plan ships in plain packaging from a licensed pharmacy with clear directions and refill timing.
04Stay consistent. We stay close.
Hair grows on a months-long timeline. Your care team is one message away for refills, side effects, or adjustments — no clinic visit required.
Honest answers about this plan.
Pick a question. Or send a new one to your care team after sign-up — every plan comes with unlimited messaging.
Back to Hair Loss01When will I actually see something?
Hair grows on a months-long timeline — not a weeks-long one. Most patients need 12 weeks before photos look fair, and 24 weeks before the plan can honestly be called working or not. Stick with it and judge it at the 6-month mark.
02Is the early shed normal?
Yes, often. A lot of patients shed more in the first 4–8 weeks once minoxidil kicks the follicle cycle. It is sometimes called the "minoxidil shed" and is not, on its own, a sign the plan is failing. Loop in your care team if it lingers or you are unsure.
03Who is this plan for?
Reviewed for either pattern. Eligibility, route, and dosing are confirmed at intake against your medications and history.
04What about side effects?
Side effects depend on the route. Oral minoxidil can cause lightheadedness, fluid retention, or unwanted hair elsewhere — uncommon at our doses but reviewed. Finasteride and dutasteride have their own profiles your clinician walks you through. Disclose every medication and supplement during intake — it matters.
05Does it auto-refill, or am I locked in?
Your plan renews at the cadence you picked at checkout (every 4, 12, or 24 weeks). You can pause, adjust, or cancel through your care team at any time. No silent commitment.
06Is a prescription guaranteed?
No. A U.S.-licensed clinician reviews your history, medications, and pattern first. If a compounded formula is not the right call, they will say so — and refund accordingly.
