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작성자 Wilda
댓글 0건 조회 2회 작성일 26-07-11 19:41

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Non Surgical Neck Lift: Achieve a Youthful Neckline Without Surgery


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A "non-surgical neck lift" isn’t a single procedure — it’s a planned combination of non-surgical treatments designed to address the visible signs of neck ageing without surgery. The right combination depends entirely on which aspect of neck ageing is dominant in your particular case: skin laxity, platysmal banding, fat, or skin quality .


For mild to moderate neck ageing, the right combination of produces meaningful improvement. For significant skin laxity or pronounced platysmal banding, the honest answer is that no non-surgical approach matches what a surgical delivers — but understanding what each non-surgical option can and can’t do helps make the right decision.



What changes in the ageing neck


The neck ages on four distinct axes, and most patients are seeing some combination of all of them:


Skin quality. The dermis thins, loses elastin, and develops fine horizontal lines (often called "necklace lines"). The skin crepey to the touch — a texture change that’s particularly pronounced on the neck because the skin there is thinner than facial skin.


Skin laxity. As collagen breaks down, the skin loses its retractive ability. Mild laxity is what gives a soft, slightly loose appearance under the jaw. Severe laxity is hanging skin that has from the underlying tissue plane.


Submental fat. The fat pad beneath the chin can be genetic (present from a young age) or accumulated ( with weight gain or age). It blunts the cervicomental angle — the sharp 90-degree corner between chin and neck that defines a youthful jawline. Persistent submental fat that doesn’t respond to weight loss can be treated with .


Platysmal banding. The platysma is a thin sheet of muscle the front of the neck. With age, its two inner edges separate and become visible as vertical cords running from the jaw to the collarbone.


Non-surgical treatment addresses the first two effectively, the third partially, and the fourth not at all. Knowing which problem you actually have determines which treatment makes sense.


For the related question of how to manage these changes specifically with energy-based treatments, see our comprehensive guide on .



Anti-wrinkle injections for platysmal banding


placed into the platysma muscle relax the muscular cords that produce visible . The effect is best for mild to moderate bandingpatients with very pronounced platysmal cords typically need surgical platysmaplasty for definitive .


What to expect:


Cost: from £350 per session.


This treatment is sometimes called a "Nefertiti lift" — placing AWI along the lower jaw and upper neck to soften the platysmal pull on the jawline. The Nefertiti comes from the elegant neckline of the Egyptian queen — though the historical accuracy of that comparison is more than substance.



Morpheus8 radiofrequency microneedling


microneedling with deep radiofrequency energy. For the neck, it’s particularly effective because:


What to expect:


How long it lasts: months from a completed course.


Cost: from £650 per session.



Fotona4D laser facelift


uses dual laser in four sequential treatment modes including an intra-oral pass. For the neck, it produces:


What to expect:


How long it lasts: months from a course.


Cost: from £600 per session.



Profhilo and polynucleotides for skin quality


For patients whose primary neck concern is crepey, thin, or poor-quality skin rather than significant laxity, bioremodelling treatments improve dermal .


uses high-concentration HA injected at specific points across the neck to improve overall skin hydration, elasticity, and quality. Two sessions four weeks apart, with maintenance every 6-9 months. See our for detailed coverage.


uses molecules to stimulate fibroblast activity. Works on similar principles to Profhilo through different biological mechanisms. Often combined with Profhilo or used in patients who want more aggressive texture improvement.


Cost: Profhilo for face/neck/décolletage from £700 per session; polynucleotides from £550 per session for the neck.



FaceTite for substantial tightening


For patients with more substantial neck laxity than non-invasive treatment can address, delivers radiofrequency energy below the skin via a small probe inserted through tiny . Single-session treatment produces meaningful skin tightening with about a week of recovery.


This sits between fully non-invasive treatment (Fotona4D, Morpheus8) and neck lift — minimally invasive, performed under local anaesthesia, with results developing over 3-6 months.


Cost: from £2,500 for the neck.



Combination treatment plans


A typical non-surgical neck lift plan combines several treatments to address different aspects of the ageing neck:


Early signs of ageing (late 30s, early 40s): Profhilo or polynucleotides for skin quality, with anti-wrinkle injections for any platysmal banding. Annual maintenance.


Moderate ageing (40s to early 50s): Morpheus8 or Fotona4D for skin tightening, combined with Profhilo for ongoing skin quality. AWI for platysmal banding if present.


More advanced ageing without significant laxity (50s+): FaceTite + Morpheus8 + Profhilo, with AWI maintenance for platysmal cords. By this stage, the conversation often shifts toward whether surgery would deliver substantially better results.


maintenance: patients who’ve had neck lift or facelift surgery use a non-surgical neck lift package as ongoing maintenance — annual Morpheus8 plus AWI plus occasional Profhilo. The combination keeps the surgical result fresh.


The aren’t fixed. A consultation the plan to your specific anatomy, concerns, and lifestyle.



When surgery is the right answer


The honest threshold: a simple test — pinch the loose neck skin gently and let go. If it springs back immediately, non-surgical treatment is likely to help. If it tents momentarily before settling, the skin volume exceeds what collagen stimulation can correct.


Other indicators that surgery is more appropriate than continued Polynucleotide Treatment (xlpeptideshop.co.uk):


Surgical options for neck rejuvenation include:


For the broader comparison, see our guide on .


For the broader non-surgical context across the face, see the and .



Who is a good candidate?


The ideal candidate for non-surgical neck treatment has:


Less suitable candidates:



Cost summary


A typical combined non-surgical neck plan costs £2,500-£5,000 over an initial 3-6 month course, with maintenance approximately annually.


, including 0% APR, are available across all treatments.


A useful comparison: combined non-surgical treatment over 5-10 years often approaches or exceeds the cost of surgical neck lift. For patients who would ultimately need surgery anyway, choosing surgery earlier is sometimes more cost-effective.



Procedure timeline


Day of treatment: session takes minutes depending on the treatment. Mild redness or swelling immediately afterward. Most patients return to normal activities immediately or the next day.


First week: any initial swelling or redness resolves. AWI effects begin to develop.


Weeks 2-4: AWI fully effective. Initial skin tightening from energy-based treatments visible. Profhilo’s bioremodelling effect begins.


Weeks 4-12: meaningful improvement develops as production responds to energy-based treatment.


Months 3-6: full effect of treatment course visible. Stable result.


Months 6-12: maintenance treatment scheduled to sustain the result.



Common questions


For mild to moderate neck ageing, yes — meaningfully. For significant skin laxity or pronounced platysmal banding, the honest answer is no.


AWI — 2 weeks. Profhilo and polynucleotidesgradual over 4-8 weeks. Fotona4D and Morpheus8 — gradual over 8-12 weeks. FaceTitegradual over 3-6 months.


Yes for all non-surgical treatments. AWI every 3-4 months. Profhilo every 6-9 months. Energy-based treatments annually.


PDO thread lifts are sometimes marketed for neck rejuvenation. The evidence base is mixed — results are typically modest and short-lived, and complications (thread migration, lumping, asymmetry) can be difficult to correct. We don’t offer PDO threads at Centre for Surgery; for patients needing lift beyond what filler and energy-based treatments can provide, surgical options are the appropriate intervention.


Yes — most combinations are appropriate, with appropriate sequencing (energy-based and injectables typically 2 weeks apart). A combined plan addresses multiple aspects of neck ageing.


AWI and Profhilominimal discomfort. Energy-based treatmentsheat-and-pressure sensation with topical anaesthesia. FaceTiteperformed under local anaesthesia.


Loose skin that tents when pinched is to be adequately addressed by non-surgical treatment. Surgery is more likely to the result you want.


Topical products work on the outer layers of skin only. Energy-based treatments and injectables work on the dermis and deeper where ageing changes actually occur. The depth of effect is substantially different.


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