Fact Check

NASA astronaut's hair 'magically transformed' after unexpectedly spending 9 months in space?

A corner of the internet appears to believe that Suni Williams returned to Earth with dark hair despite it being gray while in orbit.

by Amelia Clarke, Published March 25, 2025


A woman of Indian and Slovenian descent is pictured wearing a blue uniform. On the left, her hair is dark, while on the right two photos show her hair being gray.

Image courtesy of Neal Zurkowski/Facebook


Claim:
Photographs show that NASA astronaut Sunita "Suni" Williams came back to Earth with dark hair despite it being gray while she was in space.
Rating:
Miscaptioned

About this rating

Context

The photographs purportedly showing Williams after her return to Earth were taken in June 2024, before her space mission.


In mid-March 2025, after NASA astronaut Sunita "Suni" Williams's unexpectedly long stay at the International Space Station, rumors spread she returned to Earth with dark brown hair despite it being gray when she was in orbit.

Users on Facebook, TikTok, and YouTube spread the claim with photographs of Williams — who was at the space station for nine months after her capsule malfunctioned — that they claimed showed her before and after the trip. One video claimed her hair "made many people suspect [she] had never been to space and it was all a hoax."

On X, an account shared side-by-side images with text reading: "When you spend 9 months stuck in space and come back with a tan and your hair did." The post implied that Williams hadn't actually been in space: "Nine months in 'zero gravity,' no barbers, no showers … but her gray hair magically transformed back to a rich, dark brownno roots, no touch-ups, just pure space alchemy. … Must be that exclusive Orbit Salon & Spa package—only available at Studio NASA!"

(X user @TNTJohn1717)

The images of Williams with dark hair shared online were real photographs and not the result of manipulation or artificial intelligence. However, they were taken before her mission to the International Space Station; therefore, we have rated this claim as miscaptioned. 

Several social media posts included photographs of Williams in a blue spacesuit. The French international news agency Agence France-Presse holds the rights to the photograph included in the X post above. It says photographer Miguel J. Rodriguez Carrillo took the image on June 5, 2024, before Williams boarded the Boeing Starliner spacecraft in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Getty Images holds the rights to the photograph of Williams with dark hair included in the post below. The image's caption on Getty Images states it was taken in Cape Canaveral on June 1 — the date of a canceled launch of the spacecraft.

(X user @truthache68)

(Getty Images)

The images of Williams with gray hair were taken while she was in space. The image included in the post below was a screenshot from a video taken aboard the International Space Station. 

(X user @TNTJohn1717)

The Associated Press and British news network Sky News posted clips to YouTube of a NASA live event that documented Williams and others welcoming astronauts from the SpaceX Crew-10 as they docked at the International Space Station. The frames that match the screenshot can be seen in the AP's video at 3:14:20 and Sky News' video at 00:09.

(Sky News)

NASA posted a portrait of Williams and her fellow astronauts in space, taken on Feb. 19, 2025, that further confirms her gray hair grew out while on board the International Space Station.

NASA also holds the rights to an image, seen below, that showed Williams after she arrived back on Earth on March 18 and clearly showed she had gray hair.

Snopes has covered other claims about NASA, including a rumor that former President Joe Biden left Williams and fellow astronaut Barry "Butch" Wilmore on the International Space Station for political gain and the truth behind an image purporting to show Saturn in the Cassini spacecraft's "final moments."


By Amelia Clarke

Amelia Clarke is a journalist from London, England. Before joining Snopes as a reporter, she worked for BBC News as a producer.


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