Spider Vein Removal on Face: Laser Treatment Guide
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Facial spider veins — the fine web of small red, blue or purple vessels that surface beneath the skin, most often on the nose, cheeks and around the chin — are one of the most common cosmetic concerns we treat. They’re caused by minor damage to the small blood vessels in the upper dermis, and once they’ve appeared they don’t fade on their own. The good news is that targeted laser treatment delivers fast, effective and durable clearance.
This guide explains what facial spider veins are, what causes them, why Nd:YAG laser is the most effective treatment available, what a session involves, costs at Centre for Surgery, and how to prevent new vessels developing. All treatments are delivered on the Fotona SP Dynamis Pro at our CQC-regulated Baker Street private hospital. For more on the underlying causes specifically, see our companion guide on .
What facial spider veins are
Spider veins — also called thread veins, broken capillaries or telangiectasia — are small dilated blood vessels visible just beneath the skin surface. They typically measure less than 1 mm in diameter and present as fine red, purple or blue lines, often radiating in branching patterns that resemble a spider’s legs.
Common locations on the face:
The veins themselves are generally harmless from a medical perspective — they don’t cause symptoms, don’t impair function, and don’t progress to more serious vascular problems. They’re a cosmetic concern, but for many patients they’re a significant one. The pattern is often associated with looking older, looking flushed or unwell, or simply with persistent self-consciousness about appearance.
Spider veins can also be a visible component of , and patients who have one condition often have the other. We assess both at consultation.
Nd:YAG laser — the gold standard for facial spider veins
The Nd:YAG laser at 1,064 nm is the most effective for facial spider veins. The wavelength is preferentially by oxyhaemoglobin in the blood vessels — exactly the target — and penetrates deep enough to reach the dilated capillaries in the upper dermis without damaging the surrounding skin.
How it works:
The mechanism is . The 1,064 nm wavelength is absorbed efficiently by blood but minimally by surrounding skin pigment, which means the laser can be used safely across all skin types. This is a significant advantage over alternative treatments like IPL, which can carry pigmentation risks in darker skin.
The Fotona SP Dynamis Pro platform also incorporates a Variable Square Pulse profile that allows precise control over energy delivery — preventing the spikes that can damage surrounding tissue and more consistent, predictable results.
What to expect during treatment
Before any treatment, you’ll have a face-to-face consultation with one of our aesthetic practitioners. The consultation includes:
The consultation fee is £50, from the treatment cost.
The procedure itself is straightforward:
The sensation during treatment is comparable to a brief flick of an elastic band the skin — uncomfortable but easily tolerable. Most patients it as no worse than the discomfort of a routine vaccination. The topical anaesthetic and cold-air cooling minimise sensation significantly.
The skin may appear mildly red and feel warm for a few hours. Some patients see fine bruising or mild swelling along the treated vessels, which settles within 24 to 72 hours. The treated vessels themselves often look slightly darker initially before fading over the following weeks as the body clears them. There’s no significant downtime — most patients return to work and normal activity the same day.
Strict daily SPF 50 for at least two weeks is essential. The treated skin is mildly more photosensitive during the clearing window, and UV exposure during this time can drive pigmentation that undermine results.
Treatment course and results
How many sessions you’ll need depends on the size, density and depth of your spider veins:
Most patients notice immediate visible improvement after the first session, with the full result over 3 to 5 weeks as the body clears the treated vessels. Final results from a course of treatment usually by 3 to 5 months after the last .
Clearance of treated vessels is typically permanent — once a vessel has been closed and reabsorbed, it doesn’t return. However, new spider veins can develop over time in patients with ongoing risk factors (sun exposure, rosacea, genetic predisposition). Maintenance sessions every 12 to 24 months address any new vessels and sustain long-term skin appearance.
Pricing at Centre for Surgery
For a typical 3-session course at standard rates, the total cost is £1,350 (plus the initial consultation). For existing patients, the equivalent course is £1,200. The exact number of sessions you need depends on the extent of your spider veins, so your final cost will be confirmed at consultation.
is available Chrysalis Finance, allowing the course cost to be spread over monthly instalments.
Why laser outperforms the alternatives
IPL uses a broad spectrum of light wavelengths and can treat some vascular targets, but it’s less precise than dedicated Nd:YAG. IPL also carries higher risk of pigmentation changes in darker skin types because shorter wavelengths in the IPL spectrum are absorbed by melanin as well as blood. For dedicated facial spider vein clearance, Nd:YAG is the more reliable choice.
Thermocoagulation uses a fine needle delivering radiofrequency energy directly to each vessel. It’s effective for individual large vessels but carries higher risk of skin discolouration and surface damage adjacent to the treated vessel. Most clinicians now favour Nd:YAG laser as the safer approach.
Sclerotherapy — injection of a sclerosing agent directly into a vessel — is excellent for Leg thread veins [his explanation] and varicose veins. We don’t recommend sclerotherapy for facial vessels because the local circulation patterns differ and the risk of (skin necrosis, embolisation) is higher than alternatives. For facial veins, long-pulsed Nd:YAG laser is the safer and more effective choice.
Topical retinoid creams can boost skin cell regeneration and slightly thicken the overlying skin, making spider veins less visible. They don’t actually treat the vessels themselves — once you stop the cream, the visibility returns. They’re at best a temporary cosmetic adjunct, not a treatment.
Despite various online claims about apple cider vinegar, horse chestnut, vitamin C, oil and similar natural approaches, none of these treat the underlying vessel damage. They may offer modest general skin health benefits but they cannot and clear a dilated capillary. Home remedies are not an alternative to treatment for established spider veins.
can cover spider veins as a daily cosmetic measure. There’s nothing wrong with this approach if it works for you — it just doesn’t address the underlying problem. For a more permanent solution less daily maintenance, laser treatment is the .
Who’s a good candidate
The ideal candidate for facial laser spider vein removal:
Patients with underlying rosacea benefit from integrated treatment that addresses both the vascular component and the broader rosacea management. See our guide on for the wider picture.
Safety and side effects
Laser treatment of facial spider veins has an excellent safety profile when performed by experienced on appropriate candidates. Common temporary effects:
Significant complications are uncommon. With proper protocol selection, patient assessment and care, the risk of pigmentation change or scarring is very low. The Variable Square Pulse technology on the Fotona platform helps minimise risk by controlling energy delivery precisely.
Preventing new spider veins
Clearance of existing vessels is one thing; preventing new ones is the long-term game. The factors that drive spider vein formation can be modified to varying degrees:
What we don’t recommend
Frequently asked questions
Most patients describe the as a brief snap or flick rather than pain. Topical anaesthetic and cold-air cooling reduce discomfort . No injectable anaesthetic is needed.
Typical sessions run 30 to 45 minutes including preparation and aftercare. The active laser time is 15 to 20 depending on vessel extent.
Individual treated vessels don’t return — once collapsed and reabsorbed, they’re gone. New vessels can develop over time with ongoing risk factors. Maintenance sessions every 12 to 24 months address any new development.
Immediate visible improvement is common — treated vessels often look paler or darker (as they begin clearing) within minutes. Significant clearance develops over the following 3 to 5 weeks. Full results from a course consolidate by 3 to 5 months after the last session.
Yes — the 1,064 nm Nd:YAG wavelength is preferentially absorbed by blood rather than melanin, making it among the safest laser options across Fitzpatrick types IV to VI. We adjust protocols and conduct patch testing where .
Yes, but with specialised . vessels careful eye protection and adjusted protocols. See our dedicated service for details.
Avoid heat exposure (saunas, hot showers, vigorous exercise) for 48 hours. Strict daily SPF 50 for at least two weeks. Avoid waxing or aggressive cleansers on the treatment area for one week. Resume normal skincare gradually under clinician guidance.
Many patients with facial spider veins also have rosacea. We integrate vessel clearance with broader rosacea management — see our guide on the and the .
Our facial spider vein treatments are on the Fotona SP Pro by GMC-registered medical practitioners at our CQC-regulated Baker Street private hospital. Treatment is calibrated to your skin type, vessel pattern and any underlying conditions. We’re particularly experienced in treating veins under the eyes — a delicate area that few clinics can address safely. Aftercare is integrated and follow-up reviews are bundled into the package price.
Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·
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Centre for 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 procedures such as and . Patient safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.
Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.
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