Deciding to book a professional lice treatment is a relief for most parents. The harder part is the wait between scheduling and walking through the door. You want to know what is actually going to happen, how long you will be there, what your child will feel, and what comes next at home. This post walks through every part of a salon-based appointment at Lice Lifters of Omaha so you can show up calm, prepared, and ready to be done with this. The goal is the same one every parent has when they call: get rid of the live lice, get the eggs out, and get back to a normal week.
What Happens Before Your Lice Treatment Appointment?
The work starts before you arrive. A few small choices the night before make the appointment smoother and the treatment more effective.
Hair prep and what to skip
Come in with dry, unwashed hair. Skip leave-in conditioner, oils, and styling products on appointment day. Slick or coated hair makes lice harder to see and can interfere with the treatment products the specialist uses. If you can, brush the hair so it is not tangled and pull longer hair into a loose low ponytail. Avoid tight braids, tight buns, and freshly applied styling sprays.
Who should come, and who should be checked
Bring the child or family member who has lice. If the rest of the household has had close head-to-head contact in the last week or two, plan to have everyone screened in the same visit. It is faster and cheaper than coming back twice, and it is the single biggest reason a case clears the first time instead of bouncing around the family for a month. If you are not sure who to bring, call ahead and the front desk will help you decide.
What to bring with you
Pack lightly. A water bottle, a tablet or book or favorite show on a small device, and a small snack are usually enough. The salon-style chairs are comfortable, and most kids settle in quickly once a screen is in front of them. If your child has a known scalp sensitivity, a recent cut on the scalp, or a serious allergy, bring a quick note or be ready to mention it during check-in so the specialist can adjust the approach.
What Does the Lice Treatment Process Look Like Step by Step?
Once you check in, the visit follows a predictable rhythm. Knowing the order of steps helps both adults and kids relax through it.
Step one: the head check
Every appointment starts with a thorough head check under bright light. The specialist parts the hair into small sections and looks at the scalp, behind the ears, and along the nape of the neck. This is where most live lice and freshly laid eggs hide. The check confirms whether lice are present, how heavy the case is, and where the activity is concentrated. If you have done a head check at home already, this step looks familiar, just more methodical.
Step two: the treatment product
Next, the specialist applies a non-toxic treatment product to coat the hair and weaken any live lice. The product is worked through in sections, root to tip. Most kids find this part calming, similar to having shampoo applied at a salon. There is no burning, no pesticide smell, and no stinging eyes. If your child does not love the feeling of cold liquid on the scalp, ask for a warm towel around the shoulders.
Step three: the comb-out
This is the heart of the appointment, and it is where professional treatment is meaningfully different from a drugstore kit at home. The specialist works through the entire head with a fine-tooth metal lice comb, section by section, wiping the comb after each pass. The goal is not just to kill live lice. It is to physically lift live lice and as many eggs as possible out of the hair. This is the step that takes patience and trained hands, and it is the step that most home treatments shortcut.
Step four: the final check and rinse
Once the comb-out is complete, the specialist does a final section-by-section check to confirm the head is clear. The hair is rinsed and gently dried, and your child can usually walk out looking like they just had a wash and a brush. You will get a printed at-home routine, a list of what to wash that night, and clear instructions for follow-up checks at day three and day seven.
How Long Does a Lice Treatment Appointment Usually Take?
Time is the question almost every parent asks when they book. The honest answer is that it depends on hair and the heaviness of the case, but there are useful ranges to plan around.
Typical appointment length
For a child with shorter or finer hair and a mild case caught early, plan on roughly 60 to 90 minutes from check-in to walking out. For longer, thicker, or curlier hair, or for cases that have been around for a few weeks, plan on closer to 90 minutes to two hours, sometimes a little longer. Heavier cases that involve multiple family members can run longer because everyone needs the same careful comb-out, not because the work is harder per head.
What makes the appointment longer
The biggest time factors are hair length, hair density, hair texture, and how many eggs have already been laid. Thick or long hair simply has more sections to work through. A heavier infestation means more eggs cemented along the hair shaft, and each one has to come out by hand. Coming in early, before the case has had weeks to spread, is the simplest way to keep the appointment short.
What Comes Next After a Lice Treatment Appointment?
The appointment itself is the heaviest lift. The 48 hours after are mostly about not undoing it.
Same-day rules
Most kids can return to school, daycare, or camp the same day once a professional treatment is complete. Skip pool time, sleepovers, hat sharing, and close head-to-head play for at least 48 hours. Avoid washing the hair right away. Letting the treatment products sit on the hair shaft helps protect against any straggler eggs that hatch in the next day or two.
What to do at home that night
Wash the pillowcases, sheets, towels, hats, and jackets that have been in close contact with the head in the last two days. Use hot water and dry on high heat. Vacuum the car seat headrest, couch cushions, and any pillow your child has been resting on. Bag stuffed animals and brushes that cannot be washed for a few days, then shake them out. You do not need to fumigate the house. Lice cannot live long off a human head, and most thorough off-head cleaning is overkill within reason.
Follow-up checks at day three and day seven
The clinic will send you home with simple home-check instructions. Run a quick comb-out at day three and day seven under bright light. If the hair is still clear, you are likely done. If you spot anything moving, call the clinic right away. A short follow-up screening is faster and easier than waiting two weeks and ending up back at the start. If you want a refresher on what to look for, the post on lice treatment options compared walks through what live lice and viable eggs look like at this stage.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to wash my child’s hair before the appointment?
No. It is best to come in with dry, unwashed hair. Wet or freshly conditioned hair makes it harder to see lice and eggs and can interfere with the treatment products. Skip styling products on appointment day and let the specialist work with the hair as it is.
Will one professional lice treatment visit clear an infestation?
In most cases the goal of a single visit is to remove all live lice and as many viable eggs as possible in one sitting. Whether you need a follow-up depends on how heavy the infestation was, hair length and thickness, and how completely the home routine is followed in the days after. Your specialist will tell you what to watch for and when to come back if needed.
Is professional lice treatment safe for young children?
Professional lice treatment in a salon setting is generally considered gentle for children. The work is mostly careful sectioning and combing with a fine-tooth comb, paired with non-toxic treatment products. Talk with the specialist if your child has scalp sensitivities or a recent cut on the scalp so they can adjust the approach.
Should siblings and parents be checked too?
Yes. Anyone who lives in the home or has had close head-to-head contact in the last week or two should be screened. Treating only one person and leaving an active case in another head is the most common reason families end up back at square one a few weeks later.
Can my child go to school the same day after treatment?
In most cases yes. Once a professional treatment is complete and live lice are removed, the school’s main concern, an active infestation, has been addressed. Bring a note from the clinic if the school nurse asks for confirmation. For more on timing, see our post on returning to school after treatment.
What should we do at home the night of the appointment?
Wash the pillowcases, sheets, and any hats or jackets worn that day in hot water and dry on high heat. Vacuum the car seats and couch where heads have rested. Bag stuffed animals or hair brushes that cannot be washed for a few days. Skip pool day, sleepovers, and head-to-head play for at least 48 hours.
What if we find a live louse a few days later?
It happens, especially after heavier infestations. Call the clinic, do not panic. A short follow-up screening is usually enough to confirm whether it is a missed egg that just hatched or a brand new exposure. Catching it early is the whole point of the day-three and day-seven home check.
If your family is dealing with head lice in the Omaha area, you do not have to figure this out alone or spend a weekend on a drugstore aisle. Our team handles the head check, the comb-out, and the at-home plan in a single visit so you can move on with your week. Take a look at our professional lice treatment page for what is included, or book an appointment and we will take it from there.