Nails and hair do NOT grow after death — it just looks that way
The idea that fingernails and hair continue growing after death is a persistent myth. In reality, both require active biological processes that stop at death. What actually happens is that the skin dehydrates and retracts post-mortem, pulling back from hair follicles and nail beds. This makes existing stubble more prominent and makes nails appear longer relative to the retreated skin. It's a perceptual illusion of tissue retraction, not actual growth.
This myth appears in literature, film, and casual conversation with such regularity that most people have heard it stated as fact. The actual mechanism — skin shrinking to reveal what was already there — is both simpler and stranger.
“Hair and nails don't grow after death. The skin dehydrates and retracts, revealing existing hair and making nails look longer. It's the skin shrinking — not the nails growing. #OddlyHuman”