Instead of worrying about making friends or keeping up with their studies, new college students have a different concern on their minds: dorm water.
“Praying dorm water doesn’t ruin my hair,” one creator posted on TikTok earlier this month. “Our dorm water thinned my hair out so bad bro get a filter,” another commenter warned. “Guys what if I have communal showers and I can’t change the filter then what do I do,” one panicked.
Answering the call, TikTok now hosts 55.3 million videos advising on shower filter installations. One 20-year-old student told Business of Fashion that she’s been roped into setting them up for her entire hall.
Google Trends is also showing breakout searches like “best shampoo for dorm water.” Top results include the OUAI Detox Shampoo, Malibu C Hard Water Wellness Shampoo, and Act+Acre Clarifying Hard Water Shampoo.
For the uninitiated, “dorm water” is just regular water from college dorm showerheads. Students, however, are obsessing over hard minerals and potential toxins in their streams, fearing it could turn long, sleek locks into frizzy, tangled messes.
“How I’m protecting my hair from dorm water,” one TikTok creator shared, along with her collection of oils, clarifying shampoos, bars, conditioners, and sprays. Over on Reddit, users suggest using bottled water or apple cider vinegar as a final rinse in the shower.
@lucylovesyou3 i’m staying hopeful that i can save my hair #dormwater #haircare #showerroutine #college #hairhealth @Paul Mitchell @Kitsch @Not Your Mother’s @functionofbeauty @Sol de Janeiro Inc
♬ original sound – lucyquinn
Capitalizing on the hype, Amazon now features a dedicated “Shower Heads for College Dorms” section, with prices ranging from under $10 to $150 (not including filter replacements). Beauty retailers in college towns are also reportedly stocking up on detox shampoos and hard water treatments.
Scalp care has received outsize attention in recent years, with hair routines full of supplements, scalp serums, brushes, massagers, and oils often going viral online and thinning and hair loss products up 34% in 2024 versus the year prior, according to market research firm Circana.
Showerhead brands like Jolie, reportedly on track for $50 million in 2025 revenue, and Hello Klean warn of chemicals and contaminants in water, including chlorine and heavy metals, that can negatively impact hair and skin.
While the science on “dorm water” remains limited, students’ fears aren’t entirely unfounded. A recent study confirmed that hard water can reduce hair strength, making it more prone to breakage.
For a generation committed to “everything showers” (multistep routines with hair masks, multiple shampoos, deep conditioners) and “morning shed routines” (layering products, masks, tape, and jaw straps at bedtime), it’s unsurprising that a standard dorm showerhead and a store-brand shampoo no longer feel like enough.
Войдите, чтобы добавить комментарий
Другие сообщения в этой группе

When an influencer gets married, it’s safe to assume much of the cost, from venue decor to personalized invitations, has been comped in exchange for content. Now brides with smaller, more modest f

Welcome, and thanks for reading this issue of Fast Company’s Plugged In.
On August 22, President Donald Trump announced via Truth Social that the U.S. federal government had acq

Some of the most ambitious cancer science is happening in a disease few outside of oncology can name, and it’s revealing a future where cancer is no longer a death sentence.
Multiple mye

Ever wonder what happens to the bags that never make it to baggage claim? Some of them are now turning up in influencers’ lost luggage hauls.
It’s every traveler’s nightmare: you land, b

For years, advocacy groups made it easy for Americans to weigh in on federal regulations. If a proposed rule threatened internet freedoms or environmental protections, organizations could set up s


Welcome to AI Decoded, Fast Company’s weekly newsletter that breaks down the most important news in