This Article Has Been Medically Approved By

Dr. George H. Sanders
Women posing with her neck
19 June 2025

Injectables dominate today’s aesthetic headlines, yet more patients are discovering that lasers, neurotoxins, and fillers may only go so far below the jawline. If you’re wondering when a needle is enough and when a surgical neck lift makes more sense, Dr. George Sanders offers this balanced, surgeon-level perspective.


Comparing The Most Common Options

Goal Injectable Approach How Long Results May Last Surgical Alternative Typical Longevity 
Relax vertical platysma bands Botulinum toxin (e.g., BOTOX®) About 3–4 months before repeat dosing  Platysmaplasty during a neck lift 5-10 years, sometimes longer 
Soften horizontal “tech neck” lines Hyaluronic-acid fillers (Juvéderm®, Restylane®, etc.) 9–18 month, depending on formulation and metabolism  Skin-redraping neck lift with selective fat removal 5-10 years or more 
Reduce submental fullness Deoxycholic acid (Kybella®) injections Permanent fat-cell loss, yet skin may remain lax Submental liposuction + skin tightening with a lift or Renuvion Long-term contour change; skin is tightened, not just deflated

Injectables excel at addressing early, isolated concerns, such as a faint band, a light crease, or a small fat pad. They are quick, minimally invasive, and customizable. Over time, however, repeat sessions accumulate costs, and the structural changes of aging, including lax platysma, redundant skin, and descending fat, may outpace what needles can correct.


Signs You May Be “Beyond Botox”

  • Lasting bands at rest. If platysma cords remain visible even when your neck is relaxed, surgery may be required to trim or plicate the muscle, rather than just temporarily soften it.
  • Skin pinch test > 1 cm. When you can easily pinch a centimeter or more of loose neck skin, filler can camouflage, but cannot remove the excess.
  • Persistent jowls or blunting of the cervicomental angle. Once gravity repositions deeper tissues, only surgical elevation reliably restores definition for the long haul. 

During your consultation, Dr. Sanders evaluates these factors, along with your health, downtime tolerance, and aesthetic goals, to determine whether another round of injectables or a modest lift aligns better.


The Tech Neck Dilemma and Long-Term Outcomes

Hours spent looking down at phones and laptops crease the neck sooner than chronological aging alone. Experts note that repetitive flexion weakens supportive fascia and accelerates horizontal wrinkling. Injectables can soften early lines, yet they do not address the posture-related laxity that may emerge in your 30s and 40s. Addressing moderate laxity surgically, while tissues are still elastic, often means shorter incisions, a more subtle lift, and results that age naturally with you.


Why Earlier Surgical Intervention Can Mean Softer, Longer-Lasting Results

Counter-intuitively, waiting until laxity is “bad enough” can shorten a lift’s lifespan. Studies show neck lifts placed in the earliest stage of sagging frequently outlast those performed once skin is markedly redundant, because less tension is required to redrape, and tissue quality is higher. An early lift also may:

  • Reduce or eliminate the need for repeated filler in the lower face.
  • Preserve the cervicomental angle, preventing the “turkey-wattle” look later.
  • Deliver a result that looks refreshed rather than “over-pulled,” aligning with Dr. Sanders’ philosophy of natural elegance.

Your Personal Roadmap To A Confident Neckline

Together, you and Dr. Sanders can decide whether to adjust your injectable routine or plan a tailored neck lift that supports the graceful profile you envision for the next decade and beyond. Schedule a personal neck assessment and choose the approach that lets your profile age as gracefully as you do.