
Conversations with trans women who have undergone laser hair removal frequently bring up a specific incident. The appointment itself isn’t the problem. The following morning, I’m standing in front of the bathroom mirror, feeling nothing where there used to be stubble by noon when I run my hand along my jaw. Maybe a small thing. However, it’s difficult to ignore the apparent weight of that tiny object.
Although practically no one outside the community seems to be discussing it, clinics that treat trans clients have been quietly growing for years. It doesn’t really matter where you enter one of these practices—Manchester, Rotterdam, London’s Marylebone district, etc.—the atmosphere is usually purposefully serene. quiet music, soft lighting, and gender-neutral language on intake forms rather than the typical male/female checkbox. That’s not an accident. The reason it was constructed that way is because the clinic’s managers have discovered—often the hard way—what makes a patient feel secure enough to lie motionless while a laser is aimed at their face.
At least on paper, the mechanics are fairly simple. The laser heats the melanin in the hair follicle, destroys the root, and leaves the surrounding skin largely intact. The years of shaving twice a day, applying makeup only to cover up a five o’clock shadow before going outside, and the low hum of anxiety that results from wondering if a stranger on the train is staring at your jawline rather than your eyes are all more complicated than that process. Reducing that shadow affects more than just a person’s appearance. It alters the way they navigate a space.
Early in treatment, several trans women report experiencing an odd disconnect between their expectations and reality. Eight sessions seem doable until you’re sitting through the sixth one, the numbing cream is starting to wear off, and you start to question whether the finer hair is truly a sign of improvement. Most of the time it does. Because hair grows in cycles, the laser can only target follicles that are active that month. As a result, results come gradually rather than all at once. People seem to be tested by this slowness in ways that the marketing brochures don’t adequately prepare them for.
What’s intriguing and somewhat overlooked is how laser hair removal has found a peculiar middle ground that is more akin to self-maintenance than either medical or cosmetic. In discussions about transition, hormone therapy receives the majority of public attention. Surgery becomes even more complex. Long before any surgical timeline even starts, the laser sits silently beneath both, performing slower, less dramatic work, thinning body hair alongside HRT, and removing facial shadow.
It’s not perfect. Clients have been burned by untrained technicians. Most women with red, gray, or white hair reject the laser completely, eventually turning to electrolysis, a much more expensive and time-consuming procedure. Cost is still a major obstacle, with some report sessions costing very little. However, observing this from the outside, there’s something subtly noteworthy about a cosmetic procedure becoming, for so many, more about being left alone in public than it is about vanity.
