🅾 Bundle Count Calculator
Select your length and texture to get your instant bundle count recommendation.
For 16-inch straight hair without a closure, 3 bundles gives you a full, natural-looking sew-in with good density from root to tip.
Why the bundle count question matters more than most people think
Running short on bundles mid-install is one of the most frustrating things that can happen when getting your hair done. You cannot always source a matching set from the same supplier in the same lot, and mixing bundles from different dye batches can result in visible color inconsistencies even on natural black hair.
At the same time, buying too many bundles wastes money and leaves you with extra hair sitting in a drawer. Getting the count right before you buy is the single most useful piece of information you can walk into a shop or Amazon listing with.
The number of bundles you need is determined by four things working together: the length you want, the texture you choose, whether you are adding a closure and the natural thickness of your own hair underneath. This guide covers all four in detail.
Key rule to remember: The longer and wavier the hair, the more bundles you need. Straight hair at 20 inches needs fewer bundles than deep wave at 20 inches because the wave pattern compresses the visible length.
The complete bundle count chart by length
This is the most comprehensive bundle count reference available for Pink Lemon 13A virgin human hair. Each recommendation assumes a standard full sew-in install without a closure and standard density. If you are adding a closure, subtract one bundle from the count shown.
| Length | Straight | Body wave | Deep wave | With closure (any texture) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 inches | 2 bundles | 2 bundles | 2 to 3 bundles | Subtract 1 |
| 12 inches | 2 bundles | 2 to 3 bundles | 3 bundles | Subtract 1 |
| 14 inches | 2 to 3 bundles | 3 bundles | 3 bundles | Subtract 1 |
| 16 inches | 3 bundles | 3 bundles | 3 to 4 bundles | Subtract 1 |
| 18 inches | 3 bundles | 3 bundles | 3 to 4 bundles | Subtract 1 |
| 20 inches | 3 bundles | 3 to 4 bundles | 4 bundles | Subtract 1 |
| 22 inches | 3 to 4 bundles | 4 bundles | 4 bundles | Subtract 1 |
| 24 inches | 4 bundles | 4 bundles | 4 to 5 bundles | Subtract 1 |
| 26 inches | 4 bundles | 4 to 5 bundles | 5 bundles | Subtract 1 |
| 28 to 30 inches | 4 to 5 bundles | 5 bundles | 5 bundles | Subtract 1 |
Why texture changes how many bundles you need
This is the part most guides skip over, and it is the reason people end up with a thin-looking install after buying what seemed like the right amount of hair.
When hair has a wave or curl pattern, the strand is not traveling in a straight line from root to tip. It is moving in a curve. That curve takes up physical space while reducing visible length. The tighter the wave pattern, the more length disappears upward into the curl and the more hair you need to achieve the same hanging length.
A 22-inch deep wave bundle does not hang like a 22-inch straight bundle. The curl absorbs several inches of visible length. When in doubt, always size up by one bundle for wavy textures.
Pink Lemon Hair guideStraight hair at 22 inches hangs exactly 22 inches. Body wave at 22 inches may only hang 18 to 19 inches visually because the S-pattern is pulling the length upward. Deep wave at 22 inches may only appear to hang 16 to 17 inches because the tighter curl compresses the hair even more.
This is why you always need one extra bundle for body wave compared to straight at the same length, and one to two extra for deep wave. It is not about density. It is pure physics.
📊 Bundle count by texture visualizer
Select a length to see how bundle count compares across all three textures.
How a closure changes your bundle count
A lace closure is placed at the front of your head to create a natural-looking parting. Because it covers the crown area, it takes the place of the hair bundles that would otherwise need to cover that section. This is why adding a closure to your install typically lets you reduce your bundle count by one.
Without a closure, your bundles need to cover the entire head from front to back. With a closure, the front section is covered by the closure, and your bundles only need to cover the sides and back. For a standard head, this usually translates to exactly one fewer bundle.
Closure tip: The Pink Lemon HD lace closure is a 13x4 body wave closure that pairs seamlessly with body wave bundles. If you are using straight or deep wave bundles, you can flat iron or curl the closure to match the texture of your bundles.
The closure also has another benefit: it protects the most fragile part of your natural hair, the hairline and crown, which experiences the most tension and manipulation during a sew-in install. Using a closure as part of your regular install routine gives your edges and crown time to rest between styles.
Research from the National Institutes of Health has documented that traction alopecia, a form of hair loss caused by repeated tension on the hairline, is particularly common in women who wear tight protective styles without giving the edges regular rest periods. Using a closure instead of leaving out natural hair reduces tension on the most vulnerable part of the scalp.
Four factors that affect how many bundles you need
Beyond length and texture, four other factors can push your bundle count up or down. Understanding them helps you fine-tune the recommendation and avoid surprises.
Your natural hair thickness
Thicker natural hair creates a higher braid-down, which means bundles need to cover more volume. If you have very thick natural hair, consider adding half a bundle to the standard recommendation.
High impactDesired density
Standard density looks natural. Extra full or high density looks more glamorous but requires one additional bundle. If you want hair that looks thicker than natural, add one bundle to the standard count.
High impactLeave-out vs no leave-out
If you are leaving out natural hair to blend with the bundles, you need fewer bundles because the leave-out covers part of the hairline area. If you are doing a full sew-in with no leave-out, use the standard count.
Medium impactBundle weight per pack
Standard Pink Lemon bundles are approximately 100 grams each. Some suppliers sell 95g bundles. If you are buying lighter-weight bundles, add one extra bundle to compensate for the reduced weight.
Medium impactThe science behind bundle weight and hair density
Understanding why 100 grams of hair per bundle is the standard helps you make sense of the counts in the chart above.
The average human head has roughly 100,000 individual hair strands. That full head of natural hair weighs approximately 100 grams in total. This means one standard 100-gram bundle of extension hair is roughly equivalent to the weight of an entire natural head of hair.
When you install three bundles, you are adding approximately 300 grams of hair to your head, three times the weight of a natural head of hair. This is what creates that fuller, more dramatic look compared to natural hair, especially at longer lengths where the weight and volume of the extension hair is most visible.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration provides guidance on hair extensions and cosmetic safety that is worth reviewing, particularly if you are combining extensions with chemical treatments like dyes or relaxers. The U.S. National Library of Medicine also maintains public guidance on hair and scalp health, including information on conditions that can affect how well extensions wear over time.
Do not skimp on bundle weight: Buying a cheaper bundle that is only 80 or 85 grams instead of 100 grams might save a few dollars per pack, but you will likely need an extra bundle to achieve the same fullness, making the total cost higher, not lower.
Bundles for specific styles and installs
Different install styles use bundles differently. Here is how the count changes based on the specific look you are going for.
Standard full sew-in (no closure)
This is the most common install. Bundles are sewn onto the braid-down from back to front, covering the entire head. At medium lengths, three bundles is almost always right for straight and body wave. Deep wave needs an extra bundle at the same length for fullness.
Sew-in with lace closure
With a 13x4 HD lace closure, you cover the crown and hairline with the closure, which means your bundles only need to cover the sides and back. Subtract one bundle from the standard count. Three bundles plus a closure is the most popular combination for medium lengths.
Half sew-in or partial install
A partial install only covers part of the head, leaving the top or sides of your natural hair exposed. For this style, two bundles is often enough regardless of length because the coverage area is smaller.
High-density or voluminous look
If you want hair that looks significantly fuller than natural, add one bundle beyond the standard recommendation. This extra bundle adds density that makes the install look dramatically more voluminous, especially at lengths of 20 inches and above.
Frequently asked questions
How many bundles do I need for a full sew-in?
Do I need fewer bundles if I use a closure?
How many bundles do I need for deep wave hair?
How much does one bundle of hair weigh?
Can I mix different lengths in one install?
What happens if I buy too few bundles?
Is 2 bundles enough for a full head?
Read next
Now that you know how many bundles you need, here are the guides that help you choose the right texture and make your hair last as long as possible.
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