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Athlete hair removal is medical hair removal for sports competitors, performed to improve competitive performance, maintain hygiene, and prevent injury. Each sport offers clear, rational benefits—reduced water resistance in swimming, easier taping removal and abrasion prevention in soccer, less uniform friction in gymnastics, and better wound care after crashes in cycling. This article, supervised by physicians at a clinic specializing in medical hair removal, comprehensively explains the purpose by sport, the number of sessions required, typical pricing, and the things you must not do right before a competition.

Table of Contents
“Why do athletes get full-body hair removal?” “What benefits does hair removal offer swimmers or soccer players?” Many people have wondered this after seeing the bodies of athletes featured on TV broadcasts and social media.
In recent years, athlete hair removal aimed at improving performance, maintaining hygiene, and preventing injury has spread rapidly among both professionals and amateurs. In swimming, cycling, gymnastics, bodybuilding, and combat sports in particular, it is no exaggeration to say it has become a standard part of routine body care.
This article organizes the purpose and benefits of athlete hair removal by sport, and—from a physician-supervised perspective—comprehensively covers the number of sessions, duration, and cost of medical hair removal, the things you must not do before a competition, and the difference between medical and salon hair removal. Whether you are considering starting athlete hair removal or already undergoing treatment, use this as information to help boost your performance.


Athlete hair removal refers to hair removal performed by competitive athletes for purposes such as improving performance, maintaining hygiene, preventing injury, and aiding recovery. Unlike cosmetic hair removal done simply to improve appearance, it is positioned as functional body care undertaken to gain rational competitive advantages.
In Japan, athlete hair removal is being adopted not only by professional athletes but also in corporate sports, university athletic clubs, and competitive high school teams, and demand for male athletes’ VIO hair removal and full-body hair removal has grown markedly.
General men’s medical hair removal aims at cosmetic improvement and better quality of life, such as “improving appearance” and “making self-care easier.” Athlete hair removal differs greatly in that it is designed with top priority given to its effect on the competition schedule, conditioning, and performance.
Specifically, it requires a custom treatment plan aligned with the competition calendar—concentrating sessions during the off-season, avoiding treatment right before matches, and planning whether treatment is feasible during tanned versus non-tanned periods.
There was once a strong sense that “it’s embarrassing for men to remove body hair,” but attitudes changed completely as top athletes’ grooming became routinely visible on social media. In sports such as swimming, cycling, gymnastics, and bodybuilding in particular, a shared understanding is forming that “not grooming puts you at a disadvantage.”
The spread of diode (heat-storage) and heat-destruction laser devices that handle men’s thick body hair safely and efficiently, thanks to advances in medical hair-removal equipment, has also driven the growth of athlete hair removal.


Regardless of the sport, there are four common reasons top athletes remove body hair. Before getting into sport-specific reasons such as “water resistance for swimming” or “crash protection for cycling,” let’s first cover the benefits common to all sports.
During competition, large amounts of sweat, sebum, and bodily fluids cling to body hair, creating an environment where bacteria thrive easily. In sports that involve wearing a uniform for long periods, and in contact sports, the risk of skin problems, folliculitis, athlete’s foot, ringworm, and other fungal infections increases.
Reducing body hair with medical hair removal reduces the physical environment that breeds bacteria and improves the effectiveness of showering and disinfection. This goes beyond personal hygiene: in team sports it also helps prevent the spread of infection via locker rooms, shared benches, and protective gear.
In sports where falls and contact cause abrasions—such as soccer, rugby, cycling, and skateboarding—body hair tangling in the wound makes cleaning, disinfecting, and applying bandages significantly harder. The pain of removing bandages and the risk of reopening the wound are also problems.
Reducing hair in advance is an extremely practical benefit for athletes, as it makes first aid immediately after injury smoother and helps prevent infection risk and delayed healing.
In many sports such as soccer, basketball, and tennis, applying tape and supports is essential. With a lot of body hair, tape lifts easily, and when removed it pulls out hair along with it, causing strong pain and dermatitis.
For athletes who use tape every day, hair removal can be called an investment in protecting focus and consistency in training.
Water resistance in swimming, air resistance in cycling, muscle definition in bodybuilding—this is hair removal done to gain a sport-specific physical or aesthetic advantage.
The purpose for each sport is explained in detail in the sections below, but what they share is the structure that “having body hair becomes a competitive disadvantage.” That is precisely why so many athletes go to the trouble and expense of undergoing medical hair removal.


Swimming is the prime example of a sport where the frictional resistance between body hair and water directly affects times. Competitive events such as freestyle, backstroke, butterfly, and breaststroke are decided by hundredths of a second, so even a slight difference in resistance cannot be ignored.
Competitive swimmers have long used “full-body shaving before a race” as a way to improve performance, but shaving every time places a heavy burden on the skin, and uneven resistance from missed spots was also a problem. As a result, in recent years swimmers have been choosing medical hair removal, which keeps them in optimal condition throughout the season.
There are three types of resistance in water: “form drag,” “wave drag,” and “frictional drag (viscous drag).” Of these, body hair directly affects frictional drag; it is known that fine irregularities on the skin surface (body hair and dead skin) disturb the boundary layer of the water flow, increasing resistance.
Classic sports-science studies examining the effect of full-race shaving in competitive swimming have reported that shaving lowers the physiological cost of swimming at the same effort level and reduces oxygen consumption per distance. In the sense that “less energy is needed to produce the same speed = endurance can be conserved,” this is a very large advantage for competitive swimmers.
*Actual effects vary by individual, swimsuit performance, stroke, and distance. This site presents general tendencies only and does not guarantee any specific improvement in times.
Especially for athletes who have competed in swimming since their junior years, being able to drastically reduce the number of times they shave during the season is very important in terms of preventing skin problems.
For swimmers, every surface that contacts water during competition is a candidate. Specifically, the following areas are commonly chosen.


Soccer is a sport in which players run 10–13 km per match, while also experiencing a great deal of external stress on the skin—contact from cleats, sliding, and friction with the turf. In addition, many players apply tape every match and every practice, so body hair becomes a major practical obstacle.
In Europe’s major leagues, many players remove hair primarily on their legs, and in recent years medical hair removal has become common among Japan’s J-League and amateur soccer players as well.
Players who tape their ankles, knees, thighs, and calves suffer the intense pain of pulling out body hair each time they remove it, as well as folliculitis and pigmentation from repetition. When this continues throughout the season, the skin is chronically damaged, interfering with proper conditioning.
Reducing body hair with medical hair removal greatly lessens the pain of removing tape and helps protect the skin barrier. For soccer players who use tape at every practice and match, this is a greater improvement in quality of life than one might expect.
In soccer, sliding tackles, falls, and turf scrapes occur routinely. With body hair, hair tangles in the wound and makes it hard to clean, and bacteria can remain deep in the wound along with soil and turf fibers, raising the risk of suppuration.
Removing hair beforehand creates a state in which you can thoroughly rinse the wound with water immediately after injury and apply a bandage easily. Abrasions on artificial turf in particular—commonly called “turf burn”—are prone to infection problems, so the benefits of hair removal are significant from a dermatological standpoint as well.


Artistic gymnastics and rhythmic gymnastics are aesthetic sports in which the body itself is judged. Because athletes wear fitted leotards and tights, body hair showing through or sticking out directly leads to deductions and a poorer appearance.
In addition, there is frequent contact with apparatus such as the horizontal bar, pommel horse, and rings, and when body hair catches, momentary friction pain can reduce the precision of a move. It is one of the sports where the rationale for athlete hair removal is easiest to understand.
In men’s gymnastics events such as the pommel horse, rings, and horizontal bar, the wrists, forearms, underarms, and sides of the torso frequently rub against the apparatus. With body hair, friction heat, pulling, and pain occur, subtly degrading the quality of a move.
By grooming body hair with medical hair removal, the contact surface with the apparatus becomes smoother, creating an environment in which you can focus on technique. It also helps prevent skin problems from long hours of practice.
In gymnastics, simply having shin or arm hair show through the uniform greatly changes the impression. For men, body hair sticking out from a short-sleeved uniform is often considered aesthetically undesirable, and the more elite the athlete, the more they tend to groom body hair as part of their presentation.
This should be understood not so much as “tidying one’s appearance” but as part of the body management expected by the culture of the sport.


In cycling events such as road and track racing, riders’ legs are almost without exception smooth. This is not about appearance or fashion; it is established as a rational sporting culture passed down over many years.
The greatest risk in cycling is crashing. Contact crashes within the peloton, slips while cornering, and equipment failures occur frequently even at the top level. When there is body hair on the legs or arms during a crash, fragments of asphalt, gravel, and fibers tangle in the hair and contaminate the wound, making cleaning and disinfection extremely difficult.
Removing hair beforehand improves the ease of cleaning the wound and applying bandages or film dressings, making it easier to prevent infection and delayed healing. It is care recommended by professional teams’ staff and medical personnel as well.
Cyclists receive leg massages almost daily. With body hair, oil spreads poorly and hair gets pulled during the massage, causing pain. By removing hair, the quality of the massage improves and recovery from fatigue becomes more efficient.
Although the difference in air resistance caused by body hair is not as great as water resistance in the water, it is considered an advantage—however slight—in situations decided by a single second, such as time trials (TT), so hair removal is standard equipment at the top level. In addition, the psychological edge of “perfect down to the finishing touches” cannot be ignored.


Beyond swimming, soccer, gymnastics, and cycling, hair removal is becoming standard in many sports. Here we summarize the situation in track and field, combat sports, bodybuilding, triathlon, and more.
In sprints and hurdle events, air resistance affects results, so the higher the level of the athlete, the more they remove leg and arm hair. Tape use is also high in track and field, so as with soccer players, reducing the pain of removing tape is a major benefit.
In combat sports with intense contact, the main purposes of hair removal are hygiene, preventing snagging during grappling, and preventing skin infections. The risk of ringworm (tinea), herpes, and staphylococcal infections transmitted via sweat, blood, and bodily fluids is regarded as a problem even by governing bodies, and hair removal is sometimes recommended on a team-wide basis.
In Brazilian jiu-jitsu and MMA, there is also the disadvantage that, when grappling closely with an opponent, body hair can be grabbed and hinder escaping a joint lock, so hair removal has become common among athletes.
In physique-judged sports such as bodybuilding, physique, and men’s physique, hair removal is virtually essential for clearly showing muscle definition and separation. Many athletes shave before a competition, but missed spots and redness from razor burn are major sources of deductions, so more athletes are choosing medical hair removal.
In triathlon, the benefits of hair removal apply across all three disciplines of “swim, bike, and run,” so nearly all top athletes undergo full-body hair removal.


The guideline for the number of sessions needed for athlete hair removal is 5–10. Because men’s body hair is thick and dense, aim for 8–10 sessions for a “smooth state” where self-care becomes entirely unnecessary, or 5–6 sessions for a “reduced-hair state” where shaving becomes far easier.
The treatment interval is once every 1.5–3 months, in line with the hair growth cycle. Completion generally takes about 1–2 years.
| Area | Reduced-hair guideline (thinning) | Smooth guideline |
|---|---|---|
| Beard | 8–10 sessions | 15–20 sessions |
| Chest / abdomen | 5–6 sessions | 8–10 sessions |
| Arms / legs | 5–6 sessions | 8–10 sessions |
| VIO | 5–8 sessions | 10–15 sessions |
| Back | 5–6 sessions | 8–10 sessions |
*Thicker, denser body hair requires more sessions. Men tend to need more sessions than women.
The typical price range for men’s medical hair removal is as follows (it varies by clinic and course).
Rather than deciding on price alone, it is important to check extra-session fees, cancellation policies, and whether medication costs apply. Men’s Care Clinic’s medical hair removal maintains thoroughly transparent pricing.
For athletes, the basic approach is to plan backward from 2–3 months before the season starts. Because you must avoid UV exposure, intense exercise, and saunas immediately after treatment, treatment right before a match is avoided.
Specifically, the following schedule is recommended.


The most important thing to be careful about with athlete hair removal is not undergoing treatment right before a match or competition. After laser treatment, the skin is in a slightly inflamed state, so there is a possibility of an adverse effect on condition.
For grooming right before a match, lightly tidying up with an electric shaver is the safe approach. Handle long-term care methodically with medical hair removal.
Athletes in outdoor sports have increased melanin from tanning, which raises the risk of burns and pigmentation during laser treatment. During periods of heavy tanning, the output must be lowered, and effectiveness also drops.
For this reason, concentrating treatment in the off-season and in fall through winter, when tanning has subsided, is the optimal strategy for outdoor athletes. Diode (heat-storage) lasers can sometimes treat tanned skin, so be sure to consult a physician.


There are broadly three options for athletes’ hair removal: medical hair removal, salon (light-based) hair removal, and self-treatment (shaving / depilatory cream). Considering practicality while continuing to compete, medical hair removal is the most recommended.
| Item | Medical hair removal | Salon hair removal | Self-treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Effect | Permanent hair removal possible | Hair reduction/suppression only | Temporary |
| Sessions needed | 5–10 | 15–20 or more | Daily to weekly |
| Pain | Anesthesia available | Relatively mild | Razor burn / pain |
| Medical support | Physician on-site; can handle problems | No physician | — |
| Total cost | Moderate (250,000–550,000 yen) | High (long-term visits) | Low (cheap short-term) |
| Suitability for sport | ◎ Recommended | △ Limited effect | × Hard to sustain |
As long as you keep competing, you will keep dealing with body hair, so from a long-term perspective, medical hair removal offers the best value.


It depends on the sport. In swimming, cycling, gymnastics, triathlon, and others, it is widely known that there are physical and aesthetic benefits, and nearly all top athletes remove hair. From the standpoint of taping and abrasion prevention, there are practical benefits in almost every sport.
With medical hair removal, you can feel clear hair reduction by the third session. By 5–6 sessions self-care becomes far easier, and by 8–10 sessions many people reach a nearly smooth state. Men’s thick, dense body hair tends to require more sessions than women’s.
We recommend finishing treatment at least two weeks before the competition. Right before, there is a risk of skin redness, itching, and pigmentation, which may affect your condition.
With a diode (heat-storage) laser, mild tanning can often be accommodated. However, because the burn risk rises, treatment is done at lower output. Athletes in outdoor sports are advised to do concentrated treatment in the off-season, in fall through winter.
Pain varies by area and hair thickness. Areas with thick hair such as VIO and the beard are more painful, but using numbing cream or nitrous oxide sedation can greatly reduce it. Diode (heat-storage) lasers are considered relatively less painful.
You can, but the rule of thumb is to avoid the 1–2 weeks before and after a match. Ideally, treat once every 2–3 months, timed to periods with no matches. If you tell us your competition schedule in advance, we will propose an optimal treatment plan.
At many clinics, minors require parental consent. Also, because hormone balance is not yet stable, new hair grows easily during the growth period even after treatment, so effectiveness tends to drop. Full-scale hair removal is recommended from age 18 onward.
It is effective for preventing stuffiness, rashes, and odor during competition. For athletes who exercise for long periods, keeping the VIO area clean is an important part of conditioning. For details, see our article explaining VIO hair removal.
As a rule, hair does not grow from follicles destroyed by medical laser hair removal. However, dormant follicles may activate later, or new hair may grow due to changes in hormone balance. Rather than completely “zero forever,” the accurate understanding is “hair almost stops growing.”
No certification documents are required at our clinic. You can apply through the same process as anyone else. If you tell us your competition schedule and event dates, we will draw up a treatment plan to match, so please discuss it during your consultation.
With athlete hair removal, you can balance effectiveness and safety by drawing up an annual plan worked backward from your competition schedule. Here are recommended patterns matched to the annual schedules of representative sports.
If you share your event dates, travel dates, and training-camp periods at the planning stage, it becomes easier to propose an optimal schedule. Athlete hair removal is premised on a custom design that accounts for differences between individuals, sports, and schedules.
For 24–72 hours after treatment the skin is sensitive, so adjustments around an athlete’s particular lifestyle are needed. Following these five points keeps skin problems and the effect on performance to a minimum.
For outdoor athletes in particular, UV protection is most important. If you train outdoors for long periods on the day, consider shifting your treatment date.
Among the many men’s medical hair removal clinics, the following points are important for choosing the one best suited to athletes.
In particular, “whether they flexibly accommodate rescheduling that prioritizes your competition calendar” is the most important point for athletes who keep visiting during the season.
Even within the single term “athlete hair removal,” priorities differ between professional athletes and ordinary sports enthusiasts. The former compete over 0.1 seconds and single points, so even slight differences in aerodynamics, water resistance, and friction cannot be ignored. For the latter, the focus is on quality-of-life improvements such as “hygiene, ease of taping, and reduced self-care time.”
For example, even recreational runners, triathletes, and hobby cyclists can gain substantial benefits from medical hair removal. After a long weekend ride or an event, simply reducing wound care and the daily burden of shaving directly helps sustain the motivation to keep competing.
Those who thought “I’m not a pro, so this doesn’t apply to me” are exactly the ones for whom medical hair removal is worth considering as an investment in competing for the long term. In fact, at Men’s Care Clinic, visits from amateur athletes are increasing year by year.
Among Western professional athletes, men’s body-hair grooming is firmly established as a matter of course at the level of “grooming.” Most top athletes with high media exposure—in the Premier League, the NBA, Major League Baseball, F1, and elsewhere—undergo hair removal or regular body-hair grooming.
In the world of road cycling in particular, there is a cultural norm so strong that “you’re not considered a pro if you don’t shave your leg hair,” which is an accumulation of rational judgments built up over a long competitive history. This trend is taking hold in Japan as well, and medical hair removal is now surging, centered on athletes in their 20s and 30s.
As sports become increasingly international, having a “well-groomed body” when standing alongside foreign athletes is a major advantage mentally as well.
The benefits of athlete hair removal are not limited to physical ones. Many athletes report effects such as “grooming my body settled my mindset,” “I gained confidence in front of the mirror,” and “I became able to focus on my practice and competition routines.”
Being well-groomed is an important element of mental preparation before competition. Especially in aesthetic sports and broadcast professional sports, grooming the body’s appearance is recognized as part of “self-care that brings you to your best state.”
There is also a behavior-change effect: by reducing daily shaving time, that time can be redirected to training, rest, and nutrition. Even 10 minutes of self-care three times a week adds up to about 26 hours a year—by no means a small amount of time for an athlete.
For athletes who feel “full-body hair removal is hard on the budget” or “I want to start with the highest-impact areas first,” we have summarized priority areas by sport. Many people start with the first one or two areas and expand to the whole body once they feel the effect.
| Sport | Top-priority area | Next priority area |
|---|---|---|
| Swimming / triathlon | Chest, abdomen, arms, legs (full) | Back / VIO |
| Soccer / rugby | Thighs, calves, shins | Underarms / VIO |
| Gymnastics / rhythmic gymnastics | Arms, legs, underarms | Chest / abdomen |
| Cycling | Thighs, calves, arms | Back / VIO |
| Track sprints | Thighs, calves | Arms |
| Combat sports / MMA | Chest, abdomen, back, VIO | Arms / legs |
| Bodybuilding | Whole body | — |
*These are general priority guidelines only. We propose an optimal plan during consultation according to your individual concerns and goals.
Many people have the impression that “medical hair removal is expensive,” but compared with the cumulative cost of self-treatment, medical hair removal is, in the long run, often the more economical option.
Of course, effects vary by individual, and medical hair removal does not win out in every case. However, for athletes who compete for more than 10 years, medical hair removal is often the rational choice on three counts: cost, time, and burden on the body.
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