Mayonnaise for Lice: Does It Work & Safer Alternatives

Quick take: The “mayonnaise method” aims to smother head lice. Evidence that mayonnaise reliably kills lice or their eggs (nits) is weak. Pediatric guidance favors wet-combing, dimethicone products, or permethrin 1% as first-line options. See safety notes before trying any home remedy.

Key Points

  • Effectiveness: Lab work and pediatric resources suggest mayonnaise is unreliable and does not kill nits.
  • Better options: Wet-combing; OTC permethrin 1% or pyrethrins (repeat at day 9–10); dimethicone products.
  • Safety: Avoid heat appliances on coated hair; supervise children wearing caps; consider egg allergies.

What Is the Mayonnaise Lice Remedy?

This home remedy coats the hair and scalp in full-fat mayonnaise and covers the head—often overnight—to “suffocate” lice. Even if some adult lice are affected, surviving nits can hatch and re-infest, which is why results are inconsistent.

What the Evidence Suggests

  • Home remedies study: Mayonnaise showed limited killing of live lice and no reliable effect on eggs.
  • Pediatric guidance: “Smothering” agents (mayonnaise, oils) are not proven; standard treatments and meticulous combing are recommended.
  • Occlusive products vs. household foods: Medical-grade dimethicone formulations are not the same as mayonnaise and tend to perform better.

How to Try the Mayo Method

Not a first choice. If you try it, pair with daily wet-combing and plan a follow-up session to address hatchlings.

  1. Prep: Use full-fat mayonnaise. Protect clothing/bedding. Consider egg allergy risk.
  2. Saturate hair and scalp from roots to tips.
  3. Cover with a shower cap (never plastic wrap). Do not use heat devices on coated hair. Supervise children while capped.
  4. Leave on 8–12 hours, then shampoo thoroughly.
  5. Wet-comb immediately: Section hair; use a quality metal nit comb from scalp to tip, wiping each pass. Repeat daily for 7–10 days.
  6. Repeat in 7–10 days if any live lice remain.

Safer, More Reliable Alternatives

1) Wet-Combing (No Insecticides)

  • Coat hair with conditioner or detangler; comb slowly with a metal nit comb daily until no lice/nits remain (often 1–2 weeks).

2) Dimethicone-Based Products

  • Non-insecticidal occlusive formulas that immobilize/dehydrate lice. Follow label directions, including any repeat application.

3) OTC Pediculicides

  • Permethrin 1%: Kills live lice; repeat on day 9–10 to catch hatchlings. Avoid conditioners before use.
  • Pyrethrins + piperonyl butoxide: Kills live lice but not nits; repeat on day 9–10. Avoid if allergic to chrysanthemums/ragweed.

4) Prescription Options (When OTC Fails)

  • Discuss with a clinician: spinosad, ivermectin, or malathion based on age, resistance, and prior use.

What Earth Clinic Readers Say About the Mayonnaise Remedy

Reader experiences reflect a wide range, with some success when mayonnaise is combined with other methods: ...