If you have PCOS and you've ever stood in front of a magnifying mirror plucking the same five chin hairs at 11 PM — please hear this first: you are not failing at skincare. Your follicles are behaving exactly the way PCOS makes them behave. No amount of waxing, threading, or chemical depilatory is going to fix that. It's a hormonal pattern, not a hygiene problem.
The good news is that laser hair removal for PCOS is the single most effective tool available for managing PCOS-driven hair growth in the long term — but the protocol is different from a non-PCOS client, and the expectations need to be honest. Here's what actually works, from a Manhattan studio that treats a lot of PCOS clients.
The 30-second answer
- Yes, laser works for PCOS — it's the most effective hair removal option available.
- But you'll need more sessions than a non-PCOS client (typically 10–14 vs 6–8) and lifelong maintenance (every 6–12 weeks).
- Pair laser with medical treatment — spironolactone, metformin, hormonal birth control, or inositol from your endocrinologist or GYN. Laser alone treats the symptom; hormones drive the cause.
- Focus areas: chin, jawline, upper lip, neck, areola, abdomen midline, lower back — the classic hirsutism pattern. See our face laser and full pricing.
- Be patient with results. You may not see meaningful reduction until session 5 or 6 — that's normal for hormone-driven growth.
What is PCOS hair growth (hirsutism), and why is it different?
Polycystic Ovary Syndrome is a hormonal condition affecting an estimated 1 in 10 women of reproductive age. One of its most visible symptoms is hirsutism — coarse, dark hair growth in a "male-pattern" distribution: chin, upper lip, jaw, neck, chest, abdomen, lower back, and inner thighs.
This isn't ordinary hair — it's specifically driven by elevated androgens (testosterone and DHT) interacting with hair follicles that have inherited or developed androgen sensitivity. The same follicle that produces a soft, fine vellus hair on a non-PCOS person produces a thick, dark, persistent terminal hair on someone with PCOS.
The key difference for laser: PCOS hair follicles are constantly being stimulated to regrow by your hormones. So even after a follicle is treated and destroyed, your body may activate dormant follicles in nearby skin that weren't producing hair before. This is why the protocol shifts from "finish a series and you're done" (non-PCOS) to "ongoing management" (PCOS).
Does laser actually work for PCOS?
Yes — and unambiguously better than any other hair removal method. Multiple clinical studies confirm that laser produces significant, sustained reduction in hirsutism in PCOS patients, with patient satisfaction scores higher than any non-laser approach.
But "works" needs an honest definition for PCOS:
- For non-PCOS clients: "works" means 80–95% permanent reduction after 6–8 sessions, with minimal touch-ups for life.
- For PCOS clients: "works" means dramatic reduction of visible hair, much finer regrowth where any returns, and a manageable maintenance schedule (one short session every 6–12 weeks instead of plucking daily).
The hair you have today will largely be gone after a series. The hair your hormones generate after that will need ongoing maintenance — but a 20-minute session every couple months is a wildly different life than the daily routine PCOS hair often demands.
How many sessions will I need with PCOS?
Honest numbers, based on what we see at the studio:
- Initial series: 10–14 sessions, spaced 4–6 weeks apart (closer together than non-PCOS, because hormone-driven follicles cycle faster).
- Maintenance: 1 short session every 6–12 weeks, ongoing.
- Most-affected zones (chin, upper lip): may need slightly more frequent maintenance — every 4–8 weeks.
- Total visible reduction: typically 70–90% after the initial series, with the remaining hair being much finer and slower-growing.
This is more than the standard 6–8 sessions a non-PCOS client needs — but the alternative is daily plucking or weekly threading forever. Once you've done a year of laser, the maintenance is genuinely small.
Why facial laser is the highest priority for most PCOS clients
The chin, upper lip, jawline, and neck are the most emotionally heavy zones for PCOS hirsutism. They're visible, they regrow fast, and the rituals around them (multiple mirror checks, last-minute plucking, choosing the right lighting for video calls) take a significant mental toll.
Facial laser at a properly equipped studio is the highest-impact intervention you can make. It typically takes 15–20 minutes per session, and after about 4–6 sessions most clients see dramatic improvement.
We use the Candela GentleMax Pro Plus for all facial work — its cryogen cooling makes a real difference on the chin, upper lip, and jawline, all of which are sensitive zones. (More on the machine choice in our piece on Candela vs diode lasers.)
What about body hair from PCOS?
Less emotionally loaded, but still worth treating. Common PCOS body zones we treat:
- Areola: typical PCOS area, single session zone, lasers quickly.
- Abdomen midline ("happy trail"): classic male-pattern PCOS growth.
- Chest and sternum: usually scattered coarse hairs rather than dense growth.
- Lower back / lumbar: harder to monitor yourself, so often goes untreated until consultation reveals it.
- Inner thighs and Brazilian: standard zones, often denser growth with PCOS.
Body hair generally responds slightly faster than facial PCOS hair, because the follicles are larger and produce more pigment for the laser to target.
Should I treat my PCOS hormonally before starting laser?
If you have the option to address the underlying hormonal pattern alongside laser, the combination works much better than either approach alone. Common medical interventions your endocrinologist or gynecologist may discuss:
- Spironolactone: an androgen blocker often prescribed off-label for hirsutism. Works well in combination with laser by reducing the hormonal signal driving new growth.
- Metformin: primarily for insulin resistance (which drives much of PCOS), with secondary effects on androgen levels.
- Combined hormonal birth control: reduces ovarian androgen production. Some pills (Yaz, Yasmin) have additional anti-androgen properties.
- Inositol: a supplement (myo-inositol or D-chiro-inositol) with growing evidence for PCOS symptom management.
None of this is medical advice — you need to work with your own doctor. But know that laser plus hormonal management produces dramatically better long-term results than laser alone. The hormonal approach reduces the rate of new follicle activation; the laser handles the follicles that are already producing hair.
The Luma Skin protocol for PCOS clients
Here's how we structure a PCOS treatment plan:
- Free consultation — we discuss your hormonal history, what you've tried, any medications, and which zones are bothering you most.
- Test patch on the Candela GentleMax Pro Plus to confirm your skin reacts well and to choose the right wavelength (alexandrite or Nd:YAG).
- 10–14 sessions spaced 4–6 weeks apart for the initial series.
- Honest progress conversations at session 5 — this is where most PCOS clients want to know if it's "working," and the truth is the dramatic visible difference usually shows up here.
- Maintenance plan tailored to your zones — typically every 6–12 weeks, often combined with lower-cost packages.
We recommend bringing any relevant medical information (medications, recent bloodwork if you have it) to the consultation. The more we understand about your specific hormonal pattern, the better we can plan the protocol.
What about PCOS and darker skin tones?
PCOS affects people of all backgrounds, but South Asian, Mediterranean, and Latina women statistically have higher rates and often deeper Fitzpatrick skin types. This is a critical factor in laser planning — using the wrong wavelength on darker skin risks hyperpigmentation or burns.
The Candela GentleMax Pro Plus's Nd:YAG wavelength (1064nm) is the FDA-recognized gold standard for safely treating Fitzpatrick IV–VI skin tones. We've written more on this in our piece on laser hair removal for darker skin tones — recommended reading if this applies to you.
Will the hair come back if I stop maintenance?
Honest answer: yes, some of it. Your underlying hormonal pattern doesn't change just because you've finished a laser series. As long as PCOS is active, your body will continue to generate androgen-driven hair growth in androgen-sensitive areas — usually from follicles that were dormant during your initial series.
The good news: the regrowth pattern is much more manageable than your starting state. Most PCOS clients describe maintenance as "occasional touch-ups" rather than "constantly fighting hair." A short maintenance session every couple months keeps things essentially invisible.
If you eventually achieve hormonal balance (post-menopause, sustained medication, lifestyle changes that resolved your PCOS symptoms), maintenance frequency typically decreases significantly.
What it actually feels like, emotionally
PCOS clients often arrive with a lot of accumulated frustration — years of plucking rituals, hiding zones, avoiding intimate situations, anxiety around lighting. We want you to know we hear this all the time, we treat it with zero judgment, and the relief most clients describe after 4–5 sessions is usually about more than just the hair.
What to ask before booking
Whether you book with us or another studio, ask these specific questions:
- "Do you treat a lot of PCOS clients, and do you adjust the protocol for PCOS?"
- "What machine do you use, and which wavelength would you use on my skin tone?"
- "How many sessions do you typically recommend for facial PCOS hair?"
- "What does maintenance look like after the initial series?"
- "Do you do a free consultation and test patch before booking a series?"
The answers tell you whether this studio understands PCOS as different from standard hair removal, or whether they're going to sell you the same package they sell everyone else.
The honest bottom line
If you have PCOS-driven hair growth and the daily management of it is taking a meaningful toll, laser is genuinely the most effective tool available. Not perfect — nothing for PCOS is. But significantly, measurably better than any alternative, and most clients describe it as one of the highest-impact things they've done for their quality of life.
Pair it with medical management if you can. Be patient through the first 5 sessions. Expect maintenance. And find a studio that understands you're not a standard case.
If you'd like to talk through your specific situation, we offer free consultations in Midtown Manhattan and we take PCOS clients seriously.
Educational content only. Not medical advice. Consult your dermatologist before applying advice to your specific skin.