If hair washing turns into tears, resistance, or full-blown meltdowns in your house… I’m breaking down what’s really going on beneath the surface when kids struggle with having their hair washed, especially for sensory and neurodivergent kids. Because once you understand why this everyday task feels so overwhelming, everything starts to shift.
We’ll talk about how past experiences, sensory sensitivities, and even hidden systems like the vestibular system can play a bigger role than you might think. And why some kids seem “fine”… until suddenly they’re not.
I’m also sharing 5 simple, practical strategies you can start using right away to make hair washing feel safer, calmer, and more doable for everyone.
If bath time has been a battle, this episode will help you look at it differently—and take the first step toward changing it.
Mentioned in this episode:
How to Decrease Aggressive Behaviors Workshop
Vestibular sensitivity podcast episode
Key Timestamps
00:00 Why hair washing can turn into a meltdown
01:20 What’s really going on (it’s not just behavior)
03:30 The hidden sensory trigger most parents miss
08:00 Strategy #1 that changes everything fast
12:30 Small tweaks that make a big difference
17:10 The step most parents skip (but matters most)
Read the Transcript
Today’s episode of the Connected and Capable podcast is brought to you by the new How to Decrease Aggressive Behaviors workshop coming May 20th. I’m teaching this workshop to help parents and therapists know what the common triggers are, why kids get aggressive, which many kids, especially uniquely wired neurodivergent kids, get aggressive, and a clear plan of exactly what to do that is safe for everyone and that is respectful of the child when aggression rises.
It’s all based on strong current research, and I’m so excited to teach this to you in this two-hour workshop. You can check out the show notes or head to yourkidstable.com to find out more about grabbing a seat on May 20th to this special workshop. The recording will be added afterwards, and if you are a member of the Connection Hive or the Therapist All Access membership, this workshop is included in your membership.
All right. Let’s get started with the show today, which is all about how to help kids that struggle with hair washing. This is a huge challenge for some of our sensory kids and something that they have to do pretty often, right? So today, we’re gonna break down five tips that you can start using now if your kid is losing it when they have to get their hair washed. If they are crying, if they are freaking out, maybe they’re getting aggressive and hitting you and refusing to get their hair washed. Maybe there’s just a lot of big emotions. Maybe they’re in full meltdown mode.
Now, I just wanna explain before we get into these tips briefly what’s going on here. Now, first of all, when kids don’t like hair washing, most of the time this is related to their sensory system, right? These are their sensory needs. We are definitely seeing some sensory sensitivities here. Now, here’s the thing that’s tricky. Once your kid has had a negative experience in the bath, maybe they got soap in their eyes, maybe they felt unsteady, maybe they fell backwards, maybe they even just felt like they gulped in water and it was overwhelming to them.
There could be so many small things that happen in any given minute that they may not articulate to you, and this, this is even true for, for older kids. You know, we see elementary kids even struggling with this activity sometimes, although it does tend to get- Better as kids get more independent and are able to be in control of this activity, so it’s not being done to them. Like, there’s not an adult washing their hair. They’re the ones washing their hair, so they’re kind of able to control where the soap is, where their head position is.
Now, sometimes this is coming up every single time that you have to give your kid a bath because these sensory needs are, are ongoing. Your kid has a sensitivity to touch, so the scrubbing that’s required on the head is so uncomfortable for them pretty much every time you go to wash their hair. Or it might be the smell of the shampoo, or the shampoo getting in their eyes that is so uncomfortable for them and causes them to get very reactive and very on guard.
It’s also possible that they have a vestibular sensitivity. So remember, we’ve talked about vestibular sensitivities a couple of times, but this is our sense of movement, and it’s one of our hidden senses. So yeah, you didn’t learn about it in h- in kindergarten, but it is important, and it literally is working all of the time in our life. It is what helps us understand where our body is when we’re being tipped backwards.
So, you know, if you think about just laying down on the floor or laying down in bed at night, you probably do not think about this, but kids with vestibular sensitivities, being tipped backwards where they cannot see, so they’re having to completely rely on their vestibular system. If it’s not processing th- that, that input very well, it’s going to make them feel dizzy. It’s going to make them feel unsteady. It’s going to make them potentially feel like they’re falling.
Truly, if you can think about doing a trust fall, how many of you are comfortable with doing a trust fall? You know, you stand straight as a board, and there’s somebody behind you, and you let yourself fall all the way back without catching yourself. That’s a hard thing to do, right?
I mean, it’s called a trust fall because we’re trusting that person to catch us, but that sensation of falling straight back is what kids with vestibular sensitivities are often feeling when they get tipped backwards to wash their hair, when they get tipped backwards to even change a diaper.
And you will even see this in play as kids get older, that they really might struggle with this, just they avoid certain types of movement on the floor because they’re trying to avoid this kind of tipping back. So the bath time struggle can be because of that, and that’s showing up every time the bath happens. But you also may be dealing with fluctuating sensory needs.
So this is very common when we see that kids are kind of in different places of their regulation Remember, our regulation, our nervous system regulation is always in flux every single day, and really is changing minute to minute based on so many different factors, like how hungry are-we are, how hydrated we are, if we have slept, if we’re worried about something, if there are these sensations coming in in our environment, right? There, there are so many things that kind of affect our nervous system regulation.
And so if a child is feeling like they remember may… and this can even be on an unconscious level, negative experiences in a bath, they can get anxious, which is going to make it feel dysregulated, and they’re not going to say to you, “Hey Mom, I’m anxious,” ’cause they probably do not have that terminology, that language. They just know that they’re worrying or that their heart rate is starting to go up, or they’re not feeling so good, and they know that, “I don’t wanna get my hair washed again because that other thing happened that other time.” So there might not be current sensory needs happening with it, as much of it was kind of this traumatic event that happened for them, and they haven’t been able to really articulate that.
So I’m starting here because I think it’s important for us to just be aware of what is going on. Now, at the same time, you don’t have to get down to the nitty-gritty body- bottom of it. These tips today that we’re gonna walk through are gonna help in either situation. It’s just that if you know, “Oh my gosh, this is, this is so related to their sense of touch. They hate being touched. They don’t like when I rub their arm. They’re really particular about their clothes.
Okay, this makes so much sense that they also hate the scrubbing.” It also, you know, if you know, “Oh my gosh, they’ve always hated getting tipped back. When they were younger, they hated getting tipped back, for their diaper, and I never realized that was a thing.” Okay. Well, those are, those… That’s helpful information. That’s basically going to help you give your kid the right support. And again, if you’re not sure, you can offer or try out these suggestions, these strategies that we’re gonna walk through today, and see what is effective.
Okay? So with all that being said, our first tip is to try to not tip your kid backwards. Okay, now I know that that seems like the most common sense thing to do because you’re trying to keep the soap out of their eyes. And this is another clue also. If you can think back to when your child first started crying or getting upset about the hair washing, when was it? When… Was it when while you were scrubbing their hair? Was it while you were tipping them back?

