If you’re considering dermal fillers, you’ve probably noticed that pricing can feel like a bit of a minefield. One clinic quotes £150, another £450, for what seems like the same treatment.
So what should you expect to pay, and more importantly, what are you actually paying for?
Let’s break down the real costs, the factors that influence them, and how to make sure you’re getting safe, quality treatment rather than just a bargain.
Typical price ranges
Most dermal fillers are sold by the syringe, which typically contains 1ml of product. Prices vary depending on the area being treated and the clinic you choose, but here’s what you can realistically expect across the UK.
Lip filler pricing
Lip fillers generally range from £200 to £450 per syringe. At the lower end, you’re likely looking at less experienced injectors or clinics outside major cities. Mid-range pricing (around £300–£350) is common in established clinics with qualified nurses or dentists.
At the upper end, you’re paying for consultant-level expertise, premium locations, or specialist lip techniques.
Cheek and midface pricing
Cheek fillers typically cost £300 to £500 per syringe, though you’ll often need 1.5 to 2 syringes for balanced results. The midface is a technically demanding area, so prices reflect the skill required to achieve natural-looking volume and lift.
Jawline and chin pricing
Jawline and chin treatments usually start around £350 and can go up to £600 per syringe. These areas often require 2–3 syringes for noticeable definition, so total costs can reach £1,000–£1,500 for a full treatment plan.
Tear trough pricing
Tear troughs, he hollows under the eyes, are one of the trickiest areas to treat. Prices range from £350 to £600, and sometimes more.
The skin here is incredibly thin, the anatomy is complex, and complications (like visible lumps or vascular issues) are more common. It’s an area where experience genuinely matters, so don’t choose based on price alone.
What affects cost
Several factors influence what you’ll pay, and understanding them helps you spot when something’s genuinely a good deal versus when it’s a red flag.
Practitioner experience and qualifications
A newly qualified nurse will typically charge less than a cosmetic doctor with ten years of experience. That’s not necessarily a problem, everyone starts somewhere, but more experienced practitioners can handle complications, understand facial anatomy in depth, and often achieve better results, with less pain. You’re not just paying for the product; you’re paying for their judgement and skill.
Clinic location and overheads
A Harley Street clinic has higher rent, staffing costs, and insurance premiums than a treatment room in a suburban town. That doesn’t automatically mean better results, but it does explain some of the price gap. Central London, Manchester, and Edinburgh tend to sit at the higher end of the pricing spectrum.
Product type and brand
Not all fillers are created equal. Premium brands like Juvéderm, Restylane, and Teosyal have decades of safety data and research behind them. They cost more than lesser-known or generic brands. If a clinic isn’t upfront about what product they use, that’s a concern.
Example treatment plans and budgets
It helps to think about filler treatments in stages, rather than as one-off appointments.
Subtle refresh
Budget: £200–£450
One syringe is ideal if you’re new to fillers or want a subtle enhancement, think a modest lip plump or a small boost to one cheek area. It’s a good starting point, though results will be fairly minimal.
Budget: £400–£900
Two syringes allow for more balanced results, perhaps fuller lips plus a bit of cheek volume, or even jawline definition. This is the sweet spot for many people seeking natural-looking rejuvenation.
Multi-area approach
Budget: £600–£1,500
Three syringes give your injector room to address multiple areas and create overall facial balance, cheeks, jawline, and chin, for example. This level of treatment is often planned across one or two sessions.
Cheap filler red flags
If a deal sounds too good to be true, it probably is. Here’s what to watch out for.
Unrealistic discounts and upselling
“£99 lip filler!” often comes with catches: poor-quality product, rushed appointments, or aggressive upselling once you’re in the chair. Legitimate clinics occasionally offer discounts, but they’re rarely this steep.
Non-medical settings and unclear sourcing
Fillers should only be administered in a proper clinical setting by a qualified healthcare professional. Beauty salons, home visits, or vague “cosmetic practitioners” are major warning signs. And if they won’t tell you what brand or batch of filler they’re using? Walk away.