PRP vs. Other Hair Loss Treatments: What Actually Works
Search "hair loss treatment" and you'll find a long list of options — PRP, minoxidil, finasteride, microneedling, supplements, laser caps, transplants. Most articles list them all without explaining where each one actually fits. Here is a clearer way to think about them, and where PRP belongs among them.
A simple way to sort the options
It helps to group treatments by what they do, rather than by how they are marketed:
- Slow the loss: therapies that reduce DHT's effect on the follicle. These help protect the hair you still have.
- Stimulate what's there: PRP and microneedling, which encourage existing but weakened follicles to perform better.
- Replace what's gone: surgical transplant — the only option that adds follicles, and appropriate only for the right candidate.
Many people do best with a combination from the first two groups, started before a transplant is ever needed.
Where PRP fits
PRP (platelet-rich plasma) uses components from your own blood to stimulate hair follicles. It is generally best suited to early-to-moderate thinning, where follicles are weakened but still active — and it is typically used as part of a plan rather than on its own. Results build gradually over a series of sessions rather than appearing overnight, and they are maintained over time rather than being permanent. You can read more on our PRP hair treatment page.
What PRP typically costs in the Vancouver area
Published pricing across Vancouver-area clinics for a single PRP hair session generally falls between $600 and $1,400, with many clinics clustering around $800–$1,000 per session. Because PRP is usually delivered as an initial series (commonly three sessions spaced several weeks apart) followed by periodic maintenance, a full initial course across the market often totals in the $1,800–$3,600 range.
Monarch MD's pricing sits within this competitive range. As with our other treatments, we'd rather confirm your exact protocol and current pricing directly than quote a number that may not reflect what your scalp actually needs.
What PRP is not
PRP is not a solution for advanced hair loss. Where follicles are no longer active, no injection can bring them back. This is why an honest assessment comes first: the goal is to recommend PRP where it is likely to help, and to be clear when another approach is more appropriate.
Why a plan tends to beat any single product
No single treatment is right for everyone, because no two people are losing hair for exactly the same reasons. A physician-led approach makes it possible to identify the cause, combine the treatments suited to it, and adjust over time as progress is tracked — rather than relying on one product alone.
If it's urgent, call us at (604) 912-0600.
Learn more about the underlying causes on our hair loss causes and treatments page, or explore scalp microneedling.
This article is general information and is not medical advice. The suitability of any hair loss treatment should be determined through a personal assessment by a qualified medical professional.