5 Signs It’s Time to Re-Evaluate Your Loctician

Choosing the right loctician is the most important decision you’ll make when deciding to get locks in the first place. Deciding whether or not to continue your journey with a particular loctitician is the second most important decision you will make. During my almost 16 years of being on my loc journey, experiencing different locticians, and hearing countless stories from many in the loc’d community, I’ve learned what truly matters. If you’re re-installing, maintaining, or considering whether or not you need to switch locticians, use these five signs to know when it’s time to take a closer look at whose hands you’ve placed your hair destiny in.

1) Alignment with Your Values (More Important Than Price or Proximity)

You should feel comfortable, heard, and expanded in their presence. Notice their stance on oils, install/maintenance cadence, and policies (e.g., strict 4–6 week schedules, late fees, add-on charges). Do they calm your concerns—or escalate your fears? Flexibility and shared values matter more than the cheapest quote or the closest chair.

Reality check on costs: installs commonly start around $2,500 in many markets and can reach $4,000 for Microlocks/Sisterlocks—length, location, and stylist vary. Long-term value often outweighs upfront cost. If budget pinches, consider DIY or training a helper to maintain your preferred method.

2) Transparency About Your Hair’s Status

Every retightening is a status update, not an assembly-line pass. A healthy relationship looks like:

  • Clear mention of any concerns (thinning spots, married locks, unraveling)

  • Discussion of why something is happening and what to do next

  • Two-way dialogue—not a unilateral “sit down, get done, leave”

You are a co-partner in your hair care story. Be active: ask questions, bring a small mirror, and keep notes on changes.

3) Client-Centered Communication (Not Just “Fix It and Go”)

You want a pro who:

  • Answers questions without defensiveness

  • Can explain strategy (why rotations change, why sections differ)

  • Adjusts tone and pace to support trust

Show up as a low-maintenance client (clean, detangled per guidance, on time, respectful)—it sets the stage for better care and priority.

4) Willingness to Individualize (Method + Frequency)

Great locticians pivot to your hair, not a one-size plan. Examples:

  • Modifying rotations in slower-growing areas

  • Extending intervals when your hair tolerates it well

  • Changing tools/patterns if your roots or density need something different

Ask: “Does my hair like this method and frequency?” If not—adjust.

5) When Your Intuition Says, “Ask More”

If you sense silence around changes (thinning, marrying locks, discomfort after visits), it’s a cue to lean in:

  • “What are you noticing about a particular section of your hair?”

  • “Has anything changed since last visit?”

  • “What’s your recommendation and why?”

The rapport—verbal and emotional—should feel balanced, informative, and supportive. If communication is consistently closed, it may be time to re-evaluate.

Final Word

Locks bring ease and carefreeness—and a deep inner journey of patience, self-acceptance, and authenticity. The right loctician amplifies that. Choose consciously, participate actively, and protect your crown with systems that help you inspect what you expect.

FAQ

  • Alignment with your values and communication style—more than price or proximity. You should feel heard, calm, and informed.

  • Schedules should fit your hair. A professional who cares most about what your unique loc needs are will be willing to customize intervals and rotations, and explain why.

  • Consider DIY for parts of your routine, talk to other locticians, or train a helper to maintain your preferred method.

  • Some locticians are very mechanical in their delivery of services. They do not value collaboration and haven’t made feedback a priority. If your loctician has assembly-line energy, little transparency (no updates on thinning/marrying locks), or dismissive responses to concerns, you may need to pivot.

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5 Signs It’s Time to Re-Evaluate Your Loctician (From a 16-Year Journey)

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The Beauty and the Burden of the Small-Lock Journey (16 Years In)