Back of Head Itches at Night? 6 Common Causes & How to Stop It
In this article
- Why does the scalp itch more at night?
- Reason 1: Your pillowcase is creating friction
- Reason 2: Your bedding is trapping heat
- Reason 3: Dust mites in your pillow
- Reason 4: Dandruff and seborrheic dermatitis
- Reason 5: Product residue on your scalp and pillow
- Reason 6: Your scalp is drying out overnight
- The bedding fix most people miss
- Frequently asked questions
Why does your scalp itch more at night?
A few things happen when you lie down that make itching more noticeable. Your body temperature rises slightly during the evening, which increases blood flow to the scalp and can amplify the sensation of itch. You are also less distracted, so signals you would not register during the day are much harder to ignore. Add seven or eight hours of direct contact with your pillowcase, and the surface your scalp rests on starts to matter a great deal. The back of the head, where the pillow bears the most sustained pressure, tends to be where the itch concentrates.

Reason 1: Your pillowcase is creating friction on your scalp
The back of your head shifts against your pillow dozens of times every night. Cotton, the most common pillowcase material, has a relatively coarse weave at the microscopic level. That texture pulls against the scalp surface, individual hair strands, and the hair follicle openings over the course of hours, causing the kind of mild, persistent irritation that feels worst when you are lying still and there is nothing else to focus on.
This effect is most pronounced at the nape and back of the head, where the pillow applies the greatest pressure. Mulberry silk has a dramatically smoother surface than cotton. A silk pillowcase glides rather than grips, reducing scalp disruption through the night. If you are also noticing more hair breakage or thinning, friction from your pillow is likely contributing to that too.
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Reason 2: Your bedding is trapping heat around your scalp
Cotton is a decent insulator. Through the night, the heat your body generates accumulates in the pillow fabric, warming the scalp. A warmer scalp produces more sebum (natural oil), and excess sebum creates an environment where itching and inflammation are more likely, particularly if you are prone to dandruff or seborrheic dermatitis.
Silk is naturally thermoregulating. Rather than trapping heat, it responds to changes in body temperature and helps dissipate warmth. That keeps the scalp cooler and calmer through the night. Many people notice a difference in how their scalp feels on waking within the first week of switching. This is the same reason silk pillowcases are recommended for hot sleepers: less heat at the surface means fewer overnight disruptions, whether from sweating or scalp irritation.
Reason 3: Dust mites are living in your pillow
Dust mites are microscopic creatures that thrive in soft furnishings, feed on shed skin cells, and are among the most common household allergens. A pillow that has been in use for a year or more without a protective case can harbour hundreds of thousands of them.
Their waste particles can trigger allergic reactions in many people, causing an itchy scalp, skin irritation, and in some cases a stuffy or runny nose on waking. If you notice the itch is worst first thing in the morning, an allergic reaction to dust mite proteins is a likely cause.
Mulberry silk is naturally resistant to dust mites. The protein structure of silk, particularly sericin, and the tightly woven surface of a high-quality pillowcase create conditions they cannot easily inhabit. A silk pillowcase does not replace a dust-mite-proof inner pillow protector, but for the surface your scalp is in direct contact with every night, it is a meaningful upgrade.
Reason 4: Dandruff and seborrheic dermatitis get worse at night
Seborrheic dermatitis, the skin condition behind dandruff, is driven by a yeast called Malassezia that feeds on scalp oils. Research suggests that the scalp's inflammatory response follows a circadian rhythm, with symptoms tending to be more active in the evening and night hours. Scalp psoriasis behaves similarly: the immune activity that drives this skin condition also tends to peak at night, intensifying the itch during the hours you most need to sleep.
If you have a persistently flaky or itchy scalp, you will likely find the itch peaks around bedtime. A coarse pillowcase adds friction and heat on top of an already irritated scalp, amplifying the problem.
Both conditions are typically managed with medicated shampoos or over-the-counter shampoos containing active ingredients such as ketoconazole, zinc pyrithione, or selenium sulphide. An over-the-counter shampoo is usually the first step; a GP can prescribe stronger options if needed. Reducing friction and heat from your pillowcase is a supportive measure that many people find reduces the severity of nightly flare-ups. You can read NHS guidance on seborrhoeic dermatitis here.

Reason 5: Product residue is being transferred between your scalp and your pillow
Any hair product, from leave-in conditioners and serums to dry shampoo and overnight oils, leaves residue on the scalp and hair. When you lay your head on a cotton pillow, that residue is absorbed into the fabric. Cotton can also transfer its own residue back to your scalp, including chemicals from washing powder and fabric softener. In sensitive individuals, repeated exposure to these substances can cause contact dermatitis on the scalp, a skin reaction that produces persistent itching, redness, and in some cases small bumps along the hairline. Over time, even without a full contact dermatitis response, the buildup can irritate hair follicles and trigger the itch.
Silk absorbs significantly less than cotton. Less hair product residue is wicked from your scalp into the pillow surface, and there is far less cross-transfer back to your skin. If you use overnight hair or scalp treatments, this matters even more: the product stays where you applied it rather than being absorbed by your pillow.
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Reason 6: Your scalp is drying out overnight
Cotton is a moisture-absorbing fabric. That is useful in a towel, but in a pillowcase it draws moisture from the scalp skin throughout the night. A dehydrated scalp becomes itchy and prone to flaking even without any underlying skin condition. If your scalp tends to feel tighter and drier in the mornings than it does before bed, overnight moisture loss is likely a factor.
Silk does not absorb moisture in the same way. It helps the scalp maintain its natural hydration balance overnight, which reduces dryness-driven itch and leaves the skin noticeably more comfortable in the morning.
The bedding fix most people miss
Most advice for an itchy scalp at night focuses on medicated shampoos, scalp serums, and dietary changes. All of these can help you find relief, and for conditions like scalp psoriasis or contact dermatitis, they are important. But the surface your head rests on for a third of every day is a factor most people never change, and it is often what is keeping the itch going.
Switching from cotton to a mulberry silk pillowcase addresses five of the six common causes simultaneously: it reduces friction at the hair follicle, dissipates heat, creates a dust-mite-resistant surface, absorbs less hair product residue, and does not draw moisture from the scalp. No pillowcase replaces a dermatological treatment for a diagnosed skin condition. But for the environment your scalp lives in every night, it is the most direct and overlooked upgrade available.
At a glance: what changes when you switch to silk
| Cause of itch | Cotton | Mulberry Silk |
|---|---|---|
| Friction on scalp | High (coarse weave) | Very low (smooth surface) |
| Heat retention | Traps heat at scalp | Thermoregulating |
| Dust mite resistance | Low | Naturally resistant |
| Product absorption | Absorbs oils and treatments | Very low absorption |
| Scalp moisture | Wicks moisture from scalp | Preserves natural hydration |
Frequently asked questions
Further reading
Give your scalp a better night
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