Collection: Clarifying Shampoo

Clarifying Shampoo

Clarifying shampoo is a deep-cleansing wash built to lift what regular shampoos leave behind: stubborn product residue, excess natural oils, hard-water minerals, and environmental build-up that accumulates on the hair and scalp over time.

Think of it as a reset. You reach for it when your daily wash stops performing, when product is stacking up on the strand, when chlorine has taken the shine out, or when your stylist needs a clean canvas before a keratin or colour service. 


Who Needs One Most

Some hair situations call for a chelating-strength clarifier on rotation.

  • Swimmers. Chlorine and pool copper turn blonde hair green and lift the cuticle, so a weekly wash with L'Oréal Metal Detox or Olaplex No.4C can make a real difference.

  • Hard-water and bore-water households. Minerals build a film that dulls the tone and can slowly shift brunettes' hair to an orange shade over time. They also settle on the scalp and stop the conditioner from working properly. Both Metal Detox and No.4C address this.

  • Pre-treatment prep. BKT Deep Cleansing and Luxliss Keratin Deep Cleansing open the cuticle, allowing smoothing treatments and bond builders to bind properly. Stylists running keratin or colour services back-to-back keep a clarifying formula at the basin for exactly this reason.


How to Get a Deep Clean from a Clarifying Wash

A clarifying shampoo isn't something you use in your everyday hair care routine. Most people only need it every two to four weeks, depending on how much product they use and how oily their scalp gets.

Here is how to use a clarifying shampoo for a proper deep clean.

  • Rinse hair thoroughly with lukewarm water for at least 30 seconds. Heat opens the cuticle, and cold seals it back later.
  • Then, dose a 10-cent piece for shoulder-length hair, double for long or thick.
  • Massage into the scalp for a full 60 seconds. The lather should feel slightly different from your usual shampoo. That's the surfactants doing their job.
  • Pull the lather down through the lengths without scrubbing. This way, the build-up rinses out, so it doesn't need to be scoured.
  • Rinse until the water runs completely clear, then follow with a conditioner or a deeper mask.

A reset wash is step one, not the whole solution. Because a clarifier strips the hair back to a clean slate, restoring moisture straight after is the priority. On the same wash night, apply a hydrating hair mask while the cuticles are open and can absorb it properly. If your hair builds up fast or runs oily, a cleansing conditioner used alongside your clarifier helps keep roots clean without adding weight. For the rest of the week, return to your everyday conditioner, or a colour conditioner to hold tone between washes.


What Sets Salon-Grade Clarifiers Apart

Salon-grade formulas use higher-quality cleansing agents that remove buildup effectively without stripping the hair's natural moisture barrier. Standard retail alternatives often rely on harsh detergents that leave hair feeling dry, brittle, and stripped. This defeats the purpose of a reset wash. A professional clarifier balances deep cleansing with ingredients that protect the hair's integrity, so you get a clean slate without compromising condition. 

AMR carries clarifying shampoos from trusted brands like Back Bar, Limitless, Olaplex, Natural Look, Hi Lift Cureplex, and Luxliss, the same formulas professionals use for deep cleansing and buildup removal. Between clarifying washes, the wider shampoo range covers other hair types and concerns.

For salons that go through clarifier quickly, AMR offers these same products in our bulk shampoo range, so you can keep your back bar stocked without driving up your per-wash cost.


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Your Questions Answered

No. Wait at least two weeks after a fresh colour service. Clarifying shampoos strip everything, including artificial pigment. Using one too soon will pull your new colour out faster than it should fade. If you absolutely must clarify in the first two weeks (heavy product buildup from a styling session), use a very gentle clarifying formula and follow immediately with a colour-safe hydrating mask. But the simplest rule is to skip it.

Yes, but only once a month maximum. Curly and coily hair is naturally drier than straight hair. strips more than just buildup. It removes the natural oils that curls need. Use a sulphate-free clarifying formula if possible. Always follow with a deep hydrating mask. If your curls feel dry or frizzy after clarifying, you are either doing it too often or using a too-harsh formula. Drop back to every six weeks.

That is the clarifying shampoo doing its job. It has stripped away silicone buildup, excess oils, and mineral deposits. But it has also stripped your natural oils. That straw-like feeling means you need to put moisture back in immediately. Follow every clarifying wash with a deep conditioning mask or a hydrating conditioner. If you skip the follow-up, your hair will feel dry and brittle until your next wash. The clarify-moisturise pair is non-negotiable.

Ask yourself two questions. First, does your hair feel dull, heavy, or coated even when clean? That is a buildup. A clarifier will fix it. Second, does your hair feel greasy at the roots but dry at the ends? That is a formulation mismatch. Your daily shampoo is likely too heavy for your roots or too stripping for your ends. Switch to a lighter everyday shampoo first. If the greasy-roots-dry-ends problem persists after two weeks, then try a clarifier to reset the canvas, then switch to a different daily formula.