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Ingrown Hair vs. Herpes
What Causes Herpes?
What Causes Ingrown Hairs?
When to See a Healthcare Provider
Take Care of Your Health with Everlywell
Updated by Jillian Foglesong Stabile on June 5, 2026
Finding an unexpected bump in your genital area can be unsettling — and it's not always easy to know what you're looking at. Two of the most commonly confused causes are ingrown hairs and genital herpes. Both can produce red, tender bumps in the same areas, and both can cause itching and discomfort. At first glance, they can look nearly identical.
The key differences lie in how they form, how long they last, and what other symptoms accompany them. An ingrown hair is a minor skin issue caused by a strand of hair growing back into the skin — common after shaving or waxing, and typically harmless. Genital herpes is a sexually transmitted infection (STI) caused by the herpes simplex virus, which remains in the body for life and can cause recurring outbreaks. Knowing which one you're dealing with matters, because the appropriate response is very different.
This article breaks down the symptoms, causes, and visual differences between ingrown hairs and herpes, and explains when it's time to see a healthcare provider for testing and treatment.
Ingrown Hair vs. Herpes
| Ingrown hair | Genital herpes | |
|---|---|---|
| Appearance | Single, raised bump — often with a dark center where the hair is trapped; may have white or yellow pus | Clusters of small, fluid-filled blisters without a dark center; blisters may rupture and leave open sores |
| Cause | Hair growing back into the skin after shaving, waxing, or tweezing | Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) or type 2 (HSV-2) |
| Pattern | Isolated — appears alone or in separate spots, not clustered | Grouped — multiple blisters close together in the same area |
| Common trigger | Recent hair removal (shaving, waxing, threading) | Sexual contact; stress, illness, or hormonal changes can trigger recurrences |
| Duration | Typically resolves within 1–2 weeks on its own | Outbreaks last 2–4 weeks; recur over time |
| Other symptoms | Localized tenderness and itching; no systemic symptoms | Fever, body aches, swollen lymph nodes, and pain during urination — especially during the first outbreak |
| Contagious? | No | Yes — spreads through sexual skin-to-skin contact |
| Treatment | Usually resolves without treatment; warm compresses help | No cure; antiviral medications manage outbreaks and reduce transmission risk |
What Causes Herpes?
Genital herpes is caused by the herpes simplex virus (HSV), which has two strains that behave somewhat differently:
- HSV-1 — Primarily responsible for oral herpes, such as cold sores or fever blisters around the mouth. HSV-1 can be transmitted to the genital area through oral sex with an infected partner, and rates of HSV-1 in the genital region have been increasing.
- HSV-2 — The strain most commonly associated with genital herpes. It spreads through direct sexual skin-to-skin contact, including vaginal, anal, and oral sex.
One of the reasons herpes is so widespread is that the virus can be transmitted even when no sores are visible. Many people carry HSV without knowing it — the virus can lie dormant in the nervous system for months or years before causing a noticeable outbreak. This means it's possible to contract herpes without any obvious signs of infection in a partner.
Once the virus enters the body, it cannot be eliminated. Outbreaks can be triggered by stress, illness, hormonal changes, or a weakened immune system. The first outbreak is typically the most severe; subsequent outbreaks tend to be shorter and milder over time.
What Causes Ingrown Hairs?
An ingrown hair occurs when a strand of hair curls back or grows sideways into the skin rather than upward through the follicle. Instead of emerging through the surface, the hair becomes trapped beneath it, triggering an inflammatory response. The skin treats the embedded hair as a foreign object, producing a raised, red bump — sometimes filled with pus if the follicle becomes infected.
Ingrown hairs most commonly develop after hair removal. Common causes include:
- Shaving — A razor cuts hair at a sharp angle, making it easier for the blunt tip to pierce back into the skin as it regrows. Shaving too closely or against the direction of hair growth increases the risk.
- Waxing or tweezing — Removing hair from the root can cause it to grow back at an angle that gets trapped beneath the skin's surface.
- Coarse or curly hair — Hair that naturally curves is more likely to bend back into the skin before it breaks through the surface.
- Dead skin buildup — A layer of dead skin cells can block the hair follicle, forcing the hair to grow sideways rather than outward.
Ingrown hairs can develop anywhere hair grows but are especially common in areas prone to friction and moisture, such as the bikini line, pubic area, and inner thighs. Razor burn — a related skin irritation from shaving — can cause similar redness and bumps in the same areas, and is another common condition sometimes mistaken for herpes.
When to See a Healthcare Provider
An ingrown hair that is small, not infected, and appeared shortly after hair removal will usually resolve on its own within one to two weeks without medical attention. In most cases, keeping the area clean and avoiding further irritation is all that's needed.
You should see a healthcare provider if:
- A bump has not cleared up after two weeks
- The bump is growing, spreading, or becoming increasingly painful
- You notice signs of infection — significant swelling, warmth, or pus that is expanding beyond the bump
- You are unsure whether the bump is an ingrown hair or something else
- You have recently had unprotected sex with a new or untested partner
- The bump is accompanied by fever, body aches, swollen lymph nodes, or pain during urination
- You experience a cluster of blisters rather than a single isolated bump
- A partner has informed you they have tested positive for herpes
Because herpes can be present without obvious symptoms, testing is the only way to know for certain whether you have been exposed to the virus. At-home STD testing is one option for getting answers conveniently and privately. If you do have symptoms or a confirmed exposure, a telehealth visit allows you to speak with a licensed provider about next steps without leaving home.
When in doubt, get checked. Early diagnosis means earlier treatment — and for herpes in particular, starting antiviral therapy promptly during a first outbreak can help reduce its severity and how long the outbreak lasts.
Take Care of Your Health with Everlywell
Staying on top of your sexual health means not waiting until something feels wrong. Regular STI testing is one of the simplest things you can do to protect yourself and your partners — especially if you are sexually active with new or multiple partners.
Everlywell's at-home STD test lets you check for common infections including chlamydia, gonorrhea, and trichomoniasis from the privacy of your home. No clinic visit, no waiting room — just a simple sample collection, secure online results, and physician-reviewed reporting.
If you have symptoms or questions about a possible exposure, you can also schedule an online STD treatment visit with a licensed clinician to discuss your situation and explore next steps — all from home.
References
- Oral Herpes. Johns Hopkins Medicine. Medical Citation URL. Accessed February 22, 2024.
- Genital Herpes. Johns Hopkins Medicine. Medical Citation URL. Accessed February 22, 2024.
- Living With Herpes | Common Questions and Answers. Planned Parenthood. Medical Citation URL. Accessed February 22, 2024.
- STD Facts - Genital Herpes. Medical Citation URL. Accessed February 22, 2024.
- Genital Herpes - Symptoms and Causes c. Mayo Clinic. Medical Citation URL. Accessed February 22, 2024.
- Herpes - STI Treatment Guidelines. CDC. Medical Citation URL. Accessed February 22, 2024.
- What to Do During a Genital Herpes Outbreak. Cleveland Clinic. Medical Citation URL. Accessed February 22, 2024.
- Detailed STD Facts - Genital Herpes. CDC. Medical Citation URL. Accessed February 22, 2024.
- Which STD Tests Should I Get? | Prevention | STDs. CDC. Medical Citation URL. Accessed February 22, 2024.
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Table of Contents
Beginning
Ingrown Hair vs. Herpes
What Causes Herpes?
What Causes Ingrown Hairs?
When to See a Healthcare Provider
Take Care of Your Health with Everlywell
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