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Look Younger with Facial Cosmetic Procedures & Plastic Surgery

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The honest position on facial rejuvenation is that no single treatment makes a face look ten years younger, and the patients who claim otherwise are usually combining multiple treatments over years and benefiting from good genetics, careful skin care, and conservative use of injectables. What is a thoughtful, age-appropriate combination of procedures is significant — a refreshed, less tired-looking face that reads as the patient’s natural face at its best, rather than as a noticeably altered version. The patients who do badly are those who chase dramatic single-procedure transformations, ignore the underlying skin biology, or try to use surgery to fix problems better addressed non-surgically (or vice versa).

This guide sets out what actually works for facial rejuvenation in 2026, organised by what is most appropriate at different stages of facial ageing.

The biology of facial ageing

Facial ageing involves four overlapping processes that progress at different rates:

Skin quality changes. Reduced collagen and elastin production, slowed skin turnover, accumulation of sun damage. Visible as fine lines, surface roughness, uneven pigmentation, and reduced firmness. Begins in the late 20s and progresses steadily through the decades.

Volume loss. Subcutaneous fat decreases unevenly across the face — first in the temples and around the eyes, later in the midface and lower face. The face becomes flatter, less rounded, and contours appear more sharply. Begins in the late 30s and accelerates from the mid-40s.

Soft tissue descent. Skin and underlying soft tissues gradually descend under gravity as their supporting structures weaken. Visible as jowls forming along the jawline, the nasolabial folds deepening, and the neck losing definition. Becomes apparent in the late 40s and progresses through the 50s and 60s.

Bone changes. The facial skeleton itself remodels with age — the eye sockets enlarge, the maxilla recedes slightly, the jawline narrows. The effects are subtle but contribute to the overall appearance of an older face. Continuous through adulthood.

The implication: different ages need different interventions because different processes are dominant. A 35-year-old needs help with skin quality and minor volume . A 55-year-old needs help with the that has occurred and the volume that has been lost. A treatment that is appropriate at 35 may be unnecessary at 50, and a treatment that is appropriate at 50 would be premature at 35.

What works in your 30s

The ageing in this decade is skin quality change with very early volume loss. The right approach is preventative and maintenance-focused.

What is rarely appropriate in the 30s: facelift surgery, large volumes of dermal filler, or aggressive surgical work. The face has not yet undergone the changes that those interventions are designed to address.

What works in your 40s

By the 40s, the dominant processes are progressing volume loss and early soft tissue descent, alongside continued skin quality changes. The treatment menu broadens.

The 40s are also when patients increasingly start asking about combining treatments — for example, blepharoplasty plus skin tightening, or filler plus targeted anti-wrinkle injections, in carefully staged sequences.

What works in your 50s and 60s

By this stage, soft tissue descent and volume loss are usually significant enough that non-surgical treatments alone do not produce the level of improvement patients are seeking. Surgical options become more relevant.

The most effective single intervention for established facial ageing. The goal is repositioning of descended tissues to where they were earlier in adulthood, with skin redraping. Modern technique uses the deep plane or extended SMAS approach, which produces results that last years and do not the obviously “pulled” appearance of older skin-only lifts. See for the detailed discussion.

Facelift surgery is usually performed under TIVA (total intravenous anaesthesia) as a day case, with days of significant recovery and full final result at 6-12 months. The age range for facelift is broad — early 50s through 70s in selected patients — and the question is more about the degree of underlying change than the calendar age.

The neck ages alongside the face and is often the visible “tell” of an underlying older facial structure even when the face itself looks rejuvenated. addresses platysmal bands (the neck cords), submental fat, and skin laxity in the neck. Frequently combined with facelift in the same operation for a coordinated result.

Upper blepharoplasty (removal of excess upper eyelid skin) and lower blepharoplasty (removal of under-eye bags and excess lower lid skin) are among the most rewarding facial . The eyes are to the perceived age of a face, and addressing them can refresh the appearance . See .

For patients whose brows have descended significantly, contributing to a heavy upper eyelid appearance, the brow at a more youthful level. Often combined with upper blepharoplasty for a comprehensive upper-face result.

addresses the localised fat under the chin and along the neck that can persist regardless of overall weight. In patients with reasonable skin quality this works as a standalone procedure; in patients with significant neck laxity, it combines with a neck lift.

The static-versus-dynamic wrinkle distinction

One useful framework that genuinely informs treatment choice. Wrinkles fall into two categories:

Dynamic wrinkles appear when a facial expression is made and disappear when the face is at rest. Examples: crow’s feet visible when smiling, glabellar lines visible when frowning, forehead lines visible when raising the brows. The cause is repeated muscle contraction over time. Treatment: , which temporarily relax the underlying muscle.

Static wrinkles are visible even when the face is at rest. The cause is loss of underlying support (volume, collagen, elastin) plus accumulated skin damage. Treatment: to restore lost volume in the depression, energy-based treatments to stimulate collagen, and (where appropriate) surgical excision of redundant skin.

Dynamic wrinkles will eventually become static if left untreated, which is why early anti-wrinkle is more effective than late treatment. Once a wrinkle is established as static, anti-wrinkle injections alone become less effective and combination treatment is needed.

The combination approach is the realistic approach

Patients who consistently good long-term results almost always use multiple treatments in combination, sequenced appropriately rather than applied all at once. A typical pathway might look like:

This is a pattern observed across the patients who look genuinely well 20 years into their rejuvenation journey, not a prescription. Some will skip steps; some will need additional ones. The pattern is what matters: incremental, age-appropriate, and combined.

What doesn’t work for facial rejuvenation

Common questions

What’s the best age for a facelift? No single best age — the question is about the degree of underlying change. Most patients have facelift surgery between 50 and 70. Some early-50s patients with significant descent are excellent candidates; some 60-year-olds with good underlying structure can wait longer.

Will a facelift make me look ten years younger? Frequently, yes — but the result reads as your own refreshed face rather than as a different person. The patients who set out to look ten years younger usually do better than the patients who set out to look like someone else.

What about doing nothing? A legitimate choice. Facial ageing is a normal part of life, not a medical condition. The patients who do best with treatment are those who genuinely want it for themselves, not those acting on external pressure.

How long do non-surgical treatments last? Anti-wrinkle injections last 3-4 months; dermal fillers vary by area and product (typically 9-18 months); energy-based skin treatments need a course of sessions and benefit from maintenance.

Booking a consultation

The right rejuvenation plan depends on what is happening in your specific face — what has changed, what is changing, and what is realistic to address. The consultation is where this gets worked out. Call or use the to arrange a consultation at our .

Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·

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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic surgery through GMC-registered specialist surgeons. Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body contouring such as and . Patient safety, surgical and natural-looking sit at the heart of we do.

Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.

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