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How to Dry Your Hair Faster in 8 Easy Steps

You can get back to living your life.

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@aysha.sow / Design by Michela Buttignol

Washing our hair is one of the inevitable tasks we all must do. Even though we can space out our wash days and manage our frequency, at some point we all need to wash our hair to keep our scalp and strands healthy. And hey, it's not all that bad. However, the process of drying your hair post-shower is always a little bit of a drag. Thankfully, though, there are ways to speed up how long it takes to go from soaking wet to fully-dried.

Learning the tips and tricks to speeding up your dry time is helpful for many occasions. For one, it's useful for those on-the-go days when you need to get out the door pronto. It's also very helpful to achieve dry hair as quickly as possible during cold, winter months to prevent freezing and the possibility of falling sick. Not to mention, it's just more convenient to speed up the process than wait around like a sopping mop.

Believe it or not, the tricks start from the moment you step inside the shower. Below, two professional hair experts shed light into how they speed up drying time in their personal and professional lives. From techniques for drying curly hair to the correct heat setting you should use on your hot tool, keep scrolling for their expert tips.

Meet the Expert

1. Condition and Comb Through

Here’s something you didn’t know: Conditioner not only smoothes your strands but can help them dry faster, too. The silicone coats each strand and seals it down, repelling water in the process. Here’s a beauty editor tip: Keep a wide-toothed comb, like Wet Brush's Speed Dry Brush ($12), inside your shower, and always, always comb through when applying conditioner to ensure an even application. Trust us—you’ll see the difference.

2. Ditch Your Towel

News flash: Your towel isn’t doing your hair any favors, especially in the drying department. That excessive back-and-forth rubbing is only roughing up your hair cuticle, which is actually super damaging, so skip it in favor of squeezing with a soft microfiber towel instead. The softer texture soaks up twice as much water, and it does it without frizzing up your strands.

Byrdie Tip

You can wrap up your hair, turban style, or simply squeeze gently and allow it to air dry, depending on your hair texture.

3. Try Plopping

Curly-haired girls, it’s time to give your strands a good plopping. Diaz says this technique will not only allow your curls to dry faster, but will also help them retain their natural shape. Here’s how to do it: First, saturate your wet strands with a leave-in conditioner or styling cream, like DevaCurl's SuperCream Coconut-Infused Curl Definer ($34). Then, take a cotton T-shirt and lay it on a flat surface with the neck and sleeves closest to you (your bed is a safe bet). Next, stand over the T-shirt and flip your hair over so your hair is “plopping” onto the fabric. Grab the bottom of the shirt and hold it at the nape of your neck, roll the rest of the T-shirt toward your face, and tie the sleeves in a knot. Leave this on for 10 to 20 minutes as you finish the rest of your morning routine, then just shake out your curls and dry with a diffuser, or simply allow them to air-dry.

4. Apply the Rough-Dry Rule

So, you love a good blowout and have even gotten quite good at doing them yourself. First of all, props. Second of all, we’re going to share a time-saving trick with you, straight from Alli Webb, founder of blowout empire Drybar. “You never want to start a blowout with sopping wet hair,” Webb shared with us. “If you start with really wet hair, it’s just going to take you that much longer. That’s a mistake a lot of women make.”

Instead, she says to squeeze all the moisture out right after your shower, wrap your hair in a microfiber towel to soak up more moisture, then undo and apply a heat protectant. Next comes the clincher: rough-drying. This means blow-drying using only your fingers, tousling your hair, and focusing at the roots. Webb says you should ideally rough-dry your hair 30% to 40% dry before reaching for your brush.

4. If Possible, Give Yourself Some Time

Ask any hairstylist to share their best tip for helping your hair dry faster, and they'll say one thing: Allow your hair to dry as much as possible before taking a brush and blow-dryer to it. Depending on your hair texture, you can gently wring it dry after your shower and allow it to air-dry and as you carry on with your skincare and makeup—then, you can start blow-drying. If your hair is frizz-prone, you’ll want to keep it wrapped up in a microfiber towel (Jessica Alba told us she swears by Turbie Twists, $17 for a 2 pack) up until right before you’re ready to tackle the drying process. Which leads us to…

6. Be Picky With Leave-In Products

Clearly, the task of drying your hair is a plight many women would like to shorten—and thankfully, there are a lot of products on the market nowadays that can make that happen. Heat-conducting polymers in the products may help wick moisture away from your hair, leading to a shorter blow-dry; you can try VERB's Ghost Prep Heat Protectant ($20) or Bumble & bumble's All-Style Blow Dry ($34), both of which guard your hair from heat and reduce drying time. If you’re in a pinch, running a traditional mousse, like SheaMoisture's Frizz-Free Curl Mousse ($12), through damp strands before drying can speed up your process and give you added texture, especially if air-drying.

7. Use the Right Brush

If you’re a blow-drying fiend, make sure you’re using the right brush—namely, one that’s conducive to drying your hair as quickly as possible. A ceramic-vented round brush, like Olivia Garden’s Ceramic + Ion Thermal Hair Brush ($25), allows air to flow through and dry your strands; just make sure you’re always pointing the nozzle of your blow-dryer down.

Byrdie Tip

If your hair is especially thick, divide and clip into four sections, tackling each one and drying it before moving to the next.

8. Turn Down the Heat

When you’re trying to get out the door ASAP, you might be tempted to turn your trusty blow-dryer to the highest heat setting. Doing this really runs the risk of fried hair, so reconsider your heat setting. "The airflow is what is drying the hair and the heat is actually about heating the tool, such as your brush to smooth the cuticle of the hair," explains Diaz. They recommend using medium heat instead, saying it does "more than enough" to do the trick. (Side note: always apply a heat protectant beforehand!) If you can, opt for an ionic hair dryer as the negative ions may add shine and dry hair faster by reducing static electricity and breaking up water molecules.

Article Sources
Byrdie takes every opportunity to use high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial guidelines to learn more about how we keep our content accurate, reliable and trustworthy.
  1. Gavazzoni Dias MF. Hair cosmetics: an overviewInt J Trichology. 2015;7(1):2-15. doi:10.4103/0974-7753.153450

  2. American Academy of Dermatology Association. How to stop damaging your hair.

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