The bald spots are getting bigger, and that strip of hair in between looks thinner? It's the fifth stage on the Norwood Scale: advanced male pattern baldness where frontal recession and crown balding expand dramatically, leaving just a narrow, sparse "bridge" of hair separating the two large bare areas.
Dr. James Norwood's scale shows stage 5 as a clear escalation. The hairline forms a deep U-shape with temples receded far back. The vertex bald spot widens significantly (4+ inches), and the connecting band thins to patchy strands – scalp dominates from all angles.
Men typically reach this in their late 30s to 40s. Hiding it with styling gets tough; mirrors don't lie anymore.
Stage 4 has a thicker bridge; stage 6 merges the bald zones completely.
|
Level |
Frontal Baldness |
Crown Size |
Bridge Status |
Prognosis |
|
5 |
Severe U-shape |
Large spot |
Narrow/sparse |
Stabilize now. |
|
4 |
Moderate U |
Medium |
Thick strip |
Earlier action. |
|
5A |
Deeper front focus |
Smaller |
Very thin |
Front-priority. |
|
6 |
Fully merged |
Extensive |
Gone |
Transplant main. |
Most guides describe but skip specifics. Get aggressive:
Baldness level 5 is serious but treatable – protect that bridge while planning restoration. See a hair specialist immediately for personalized scans and options. Act decisively to skip stage 6.