House Cleaning After Lice: The Complete Room-by-Room Guide
A calm, evidence-based room-by-room guide to cleaning your home after a head lice infestation — covering exactly what needs cleaning and what absolutely does not.
To fully handle head lice, you must break their lifecycle. This requires a two-step approach: killing the live bugs (via OTC treatments or smothering) and removing the eggs (via meticulous wet combing). You must re-check the hair every 2–3 days for two weeks.
The Lifecycle of Head Lice
Understanding how lice grow is the key to getting rid of them. An adult female louse lays 3–5 eggs (nits) per day. These eggs are glued firmly to the hair shaft close to the scalp, where it is warm and humid.
If you only kill the live bugs and leave the eggs, those eggs will hatch in about a week, and the infestation will start all over again. This is the most common reason why parents feel like they can never get rid of lice.
- Eggs (Nits): Take 7–10 days to hatch. Hard to see, glued to the hair.
- Nymphs: Baby lice. Take 7–10 days to mature into adults. Cannot reproduce yet.
- Adults: Live about 30 days on a human head. Females lay eggs daily.
The Importance of Wet Combing
Wet combing is the process of coating the hair in a thick white conditioner (which stuns the live lice and provides slip) and methodically combing through every section of hair from the scalp to the ends. This physically removes both the live bugs and the unhatched nits.
You cannot skip this step. Even the strongest prescription treatments recommend combing to ensure complete eradication.
The 14-Day Eradication Protocol
- Day 1: Apply primary treatment to kill live bugs.
- Day 1: Thoroughly comb wet, conditioned hair to remove eggs.
- Day 4: Follow-up wet combing check.
- Day 7: Second wet combing check.
- Day 9 or 10: Apply second round of treatment (to kill any nymphs that hatched).
- Day 14: Final wet combing check to declare clearance.
Common Mistakes Parents Make
Treatment failure is incredibly common. Usually, it's not because the product was completely defective, but because of application errors or a misunderstanding of the lice lifecycle.
- Not leaving the treatment on long enough (follow package directions exactly).
- Applying treatment to soaking wet hair (which dilutes the chemical).
- Skipping the comb-out process entirely.
- Failing to retreat 9 days later.
- Focusing too much on cleaning the house and not enough on combing the head.
A Note on Super Lice: "Super lice" are simply head lice that have developed a genetic resistance to pyrethrins and permethrin—the active ingredients in most traditional drugstore kits like Nix and Rid. If you use these and live bugs are still crawling the next day, you likely have resistant lice and should switch to a dimethicone-based product or focus entirely on manual wet-combing.
When to See a Doctor
While head lice can almost always be treated at home, you should consult a doctor if the scalp becomes red, tender, or oozing, as this may indicate a secondary bacterial infection from scratching. You should also see a doctor if you have diligently followed the 14-day protocol and are still finding live lice.