Get a realistic 2026 all-in estimate for a facelift procedure by type, neck lift add-on, and surgeon credentials — then connect with board-certified plastic surgeons near you.
Procedure Type
Neck Lift Add-On
Surgeon Type
Location
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Disclaimer: This calculator provides cost estimates for informational purposes only. It is not medical or dental advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendation. Actual procedure costs vary by provider, location, insurance coverage, complications, and individual medical factors. Consult a licensed healthcare provider for medical guidance. Insurance coverage and out-of-pocket costs should be verified directly with your insurer and the provider before scheduling any procedure. This estimate does not include prescription medications, follow-up care, complications, or related ancillary services unless explicitly stated. No outcome, safety, or success rate is implied or guaranteed.
Did You Know?
Facelift surgery costs $4,000–$30,000 all-in in 2026 depending on type: a mini/S-lift averages $4,000–$8,000, a full traditional facelift $7,000–$15,000, and a deep-plane facelift $15,000–$30,000. Adding a combined neck lift typically adds $3,000–$6,000. These figures include surgeon, anesthesia, and facility fees.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q
How much does a facelift cost in 2026?
A facelift costs $4,000 to $30,000 all-in in 2026 depending on the type of procedure, whether a neck lift is added, surgeon credentials, and location. A mini or S-lift targeting the lower face and jawline runs $4,000 to $8,000. A full traditional facelift (rhytidectomy) addressing the mid-face, jowls, and neck costs $7,000 to $15,000. A deep-plane facelift, which repositions deeper facial tissues for longer-lasting results, runs $15,000 to $30,000. These are all-in figures including surgeon, anesthesia, and surgical facility fees.
Mini / S-lift (jawline, limited incision): $4,000–$8,000 all-in
Full / traditional facelift (rhytidectomy): $7,000–$15,000 all-in
Neck lift add-on: typically +$3,000–$6,000 when combined
Major metros (NYC, LA, Miami, SF) run 25–40% above national average
Facelift Type
All-In Range (2026)
Typical Recovery
Mini / S-lift
$4,000–$8,000
7–14 days
Full facelift
$7,000–$15,000
2–3 weeks
Deep-plane facelift
$15,000–$30,000
3–4 weeks
Q
What is the difference in cost between a mini facelift and a full facelift?
A mini facelift typically costs $4,000 to $8,000 all-in, while a full traditional facelift runs $7,000 to $15,000 — roughly 75 to 90 percent more at mid-range. The price gap reflects longer operating time, more extensive tissue repositioning, and greater anesthesia requirements. A mini lift uses shorter incisions near the ears to address early jowling and mild lower-face laxity; the surgical session typically lasts 1.5 to 2.5 hours under local anesthesia or light IV sedation. A full facelift repositions the SMAS (superficial muscular aponeurotic system) layer, addresses mid-face descent, and frequently extends into the neck, adding 2 to 4 hours of OR time and typically requiring general anesthesia or deep IV sedation.
Mini / S-lift: $4,000–$8,000, 1.5–2.5 hours, local or light IV sedation
Full facelift: $7,000–$15,000, 3–5 hours, IV sedation or general anesthesia
Price gap at mid-range: approximately 75–90% more for a full facelift
Mini lift best suited to early laxity in patients under 55
Full facelift addresses mid-face, jowls, and often the neck in one session
Feature
Mini / S-Lift
Full Facelift
All-in cost (2026)
$4,000–$8,000
$7,000–$15,000
OR time
1.5–2.5 hours
3–5 hours
Anesthesia
Local or light IV
IV sedation or general
Recovery
7–14 days
2–3 weeks
Q
How much does adding a neck lift to a facelift cost?
Adding a neck lift (platysmaplasty) to a facelift in the same surgical session typically adds $3,000 to $6,000 to the total cost. Because the patient is already under anesthesia and the OR is already running, the incremental cost is far lower than scheduling a standalone neck lift, which would add another full round of anesthesia ($500–$1,500) and facility fees ($800–$2,500) on top of the surgeon's fee. Many plastic surgeons recommend combining a neck lift with a full facelift because jowl correction and neck correction are anatomically linked — improving the lower face without addressing the neck can create a mismatched appearance.
Neck lift add-on in same session: +$3,000–$6,000 to any facelift type
Standalone neck lift if scheduled separately: typically $5,000–$9,000 all-in
Combining saves one round of anesthesia ($500–$1,500) and facility fees ($800–$2,500)
Surgeons often recommend combining: jowl and neck correction are anatomically linked
Recovery time increase for combined procedure: typically 3–7 additional days
Approach
Estimated Cost
Anesthesia / Facility
Facelift only
$7,000–$15,000
Single session
Facelift + neck lift (combined)
$10,000–$21,000
Single session
Neck lift standalone (later)
$5,000–$9,000 extra
Second full session
Q
Is a board-certified plastic surgeon worth the extra cost for a facelift?
Board-certified plastic surgeons (ABPS) typically charge 20 to 28 percent more than cosmetic surgery centers for equivalent facelift procedures, driven by deeper training, higher malpractice premiums, and more complex practice overhead. The premium is most clearly justified for full and deep-plane facelifts, combined facelift-and-neck procedures, revisions of prior facelift work, and patients with significant skin laxity or anatomical variation. For a straightforward mini facelift on an ideal candidate with mild laxity, an experienced cosmetic center physician with a strong track record may represent a reasonable choice. The decisive data point is always the surgeon's before-and-after portfolio showing patients with similar anatomy.
Board-certified PS (ABPS): 20–28% premium over cosmetic surgery center
Premium justified most for full and deep-plane facelifts, revisions, and complex anatomy
Cosmetic surgery centers: lower overhead, competitive pricing, variable credentials
Always confirm the operating physician's credentials, not just the clinic's name
Review before-and-after photos of patients with similar age, skin laxity, and anatomy
Provider Type
Typical Premium
Best For
Cosmetic surgery center
Baseline
Mini lift, straightforward candidates, high volume
Board-certified PS (ABPS)
20–28% above baseline
Full/deep-plane, revisions, complex anatomy
Q
How does location affect facelift prices?
Geographic location can shift the total facelift cost by 25 to 45 percent. Major coastal metros — New York City, Los Angeles, Miami, and San Francisco — command the highest prices, driven by commercial real estate costs, high physician demand, and market rate expectations. Mid-size cities and the Midwest and Southeast tend to run closer to national averages or 10 to 20 percent below them. A full facelift priced at $9,000 in Charlotte, North Carolina might cost $12,000 to $13,000 in New York City or $11,000 to $12,500 in Los Angeles. Medical tourism to countries such as Mexico, Colombia, and Turkey can reduce total cost by 40 to 60 percent, but creates meaningful challenges around post-operative follow-up, managing complications, and credential verification.
NYC, LA, Miami, SF: 25–40% above national average
Mid-size US cities: near national average
Midwest and Southeast: often 10–20% below national average
Medical tourism abroad: 40–60% cheaper, but adds travel and follow-up complexity
Get at least two local quotes before comparing domestic vs. international options
Q
Does health insurance cover facelift surgery?
Standard health insurance does not cover cosmetic facelift surgery performed for aesthetic reasons. A narrow exception applies when reconstructive work is medically necessary — for example, correcting facial paralysis sequelae, addressing post-traumatic deformity, or reconstructing anatomy following cancer surgery. In those cases, coverage depends on the specific insurer, the diagnosis code, and pre-authorization. Purely aesthetic facelifts are not covered, regardless of age, severity of laxity, or patient preference. Medical financing programs such as CareCredit, Alphaeon Credit, and Prosper Healthcare Lending offer 12 to 24 month no-interest plans for qualified borrowers and are widely accepted at cosmetic surgery practices.
Cosmetic facelift: not covered by health insurance
Reconstructive cases (trauma, paralysis, cancer): may qualify for partial coverage with pre-auth
Medical financing: CareCredit, Alphaeon, Prosper Healthcare Lending widely available
12–24 month no-interest plans available for qualified applicants
Verify any financing terms carefully: deferred-interest plans carry high retroactive rates if not paid in full
Example Calculations
1Mini facelift, no neck lift, cosmetic surgery center
Inputs
Facelift typeMini / S-lift
Neck liftNo neck lift
ProviderCosmetic surgery center
Result
Estimated all-in cost$4,000 – $8,000
Typical surgeon fee$2,000–$4,500
Anesthesia + facility$1,800–$3,500
A mini / S-lift at a cosmetic surgery center without a neck lift represents the entry-level range for facelift surgery. The $4,000–$8,000 all-in covers surgeon, anesthesia (often local or light IV sedation), and an outpatient surgical facility for a 1.5–2.5 hour session.
2Full facelift, with neck lift, board-certified plastic surgeon
Applying the board-certified PS premium (20–28%) to the full facelift base range of $7,000–$15,000 yields $8,400–$19,200. Adding the neck lift addon of $3,000–$6,000 brings the combined total to $11,400–$25,200 all-in for a same-session facelift and neck lift.
3Deep-plane facelift, no neck lift, board-certified plastic surgeon
Inputs
Facelift typeDeep-plane facelift (extended SMAS)
Neck liftNo neck lift
ProviderBoard-certified plastic surgeon
Result
Estimated all-in cost$18,000 – $38,400
Anesthesia (general)Included in range
Recovery garments$150–$400 (separate)
Applying the board-certified PS premium (20–28%) to the deep-plane facelift base of $15,000–$30,000 yields $18,000–$38,400 all-in. Deep-plane work requires general anesthesia and 4–6 hours of OR time, which is built into this range. Post-op compression garments and follow-up visits are typically billed separately.
The total out-the-door cost starts with the base procedure range for the facelift type, multiplied by the surgeon-tier factor, and then the neck lift addon (if selected) is added as a flat amount. Always request an itemized quote separating surgeon fee, anesthesia, and facility.
Where:
Base facelift cost= All-in range for the chosen type: mini $4,000–$8,000, full $7,000–$15,000, deep-plane $15,000–$30,000
Surgeon multiplier= 1.0 for cosmetic surgery center; 1.20–1.28 for board-certified plastic surgeon (ABPS)
Neck lift addon= Flat $3,000–$6,000 when combined platysmaplasty is added in the same session
Combined session savings vs. staged procedures
Savings = Standalone neck lift total − Same-session addon cost
Combining a neck lift with a facelift in the same OR session avoids a second round of anesthesia and facility fees. A standalone neck lift typically costs $5,000–$9,000 all-in; the same-session addon costs $3,000–$6,000, saving $2,000–$3,000 in overhead.
Where:
Standalone neck lift total= Full all-in cost if scheduled as a separate procedure: $5,000–$9,000
Same-session addon cost= Incremental cost when added to an ongoing facelift: $3,000–$6,000
Savings= Typically $2,000–$3,000 in avoided anesthesia and facility overhead
Surgeon-tier premium
Board-certified total = Base cost × 1.20 to 1.28
Board-certified plastic surgeons (ABPS) command a 20–28% premium above cosmetic surgery center pricing for equivalent facelift procedures, reflecting deeper training and higher malpractice overhead.
Where:
Base cost= All-in quote from a cosmetic surgery center for the same facelift type and session scope
1.20–1.28= ABPS credential multiplier; higher end applies to deep-plane procedures and complex revisions
Facelift Costs in 2026: What You Actually Pay by Type, Neck Lift, and Surgeon
1
What Facelift Surgery Costs in 2026
The figures this calculator produces are informational estimates based on 2026 US market data. As noted in the disclaimer above, actual procedure costs vary significantly by provider, location, individual anatomy, and complications. With that framing in mind, here is what the US facelift market looks like in 2026: a mini or S-lift — a limited-incision procedure targeting the lower face and jawline — costs $4,000 to $8,000 all-in, meaning the surgeon's fee plus anesthesia plus surgical facility. A full traditional facelift (rhytidectomy), which repositions the SMAS layer and addresses mid-face descent, jowling, and often the upper neck, runs $7,000 to $15,000 all-in. A deep-plane facelift, which operates in a deeper tissue plane beneath the SMAS to reposition mid-face fat compartments for more durable results, costs $15,000 to $30,000. Adding a neck lift (platysmaplasty) to any of these procedures in the same session typically adds $3,000 to $6,000.
These ranges represent realistic all-in prices for a board-eligible or board-certified cosmetic surgeon operating in a licensed outpatient surgical center. The wide spread inside each band reflects real variation in the market: the surgeon's geographic location and reputation, the patient's degree of skin laxity and facial volume loss, the specific techniques employed, and whether the session is a primary procedure or a revision. A high-volume cosmetic surgery center in a mid-size Midwestern city is not operating the same cost structure as a boutique plastic surgery practice in Beverly Hills, and the quotes you receive will reflect those differences. The calculator above applies facelift type, neck lift selection, and surgeon tier to a consistent all-in base so you can arrive at consultations with a grounded anchor number.
The most important thing to understand before calling a single clinic is that facelift pricing is almost always quoted in parts, even when only one total number appears on an estimate. Some practices lead with the surgeon's fee alone — often $3,500 to $8,000 for a full facelift — and add anesthesia and facility fees at the time of booking. Others bundle everything into a single price. Comparing quotes across clinics requires comparing the same components. A $7,000 surgeon-only quote and an $11,000 all-in quote may represent the same procedure. Always request an itemized breakdown before making any comparison.
Facelift all-in cost by procedure type, US, 2026.
Facelift Type
All-In Range (2026)
Typical Anesthesia
Mini / S-lift
$4,000–$8,000
Local or light IV sedation
Full facelift (rhytidectomy)
$7,000–$15,000
IV sedation or general
Deep-plane facelift
$15,000–$30,000
General anesthesia
Neck lift add-on (any type)
+$3,000–$6,000
Included in session
Always request an itemized quote: surgeon fee, anesthesia fee, and facility fee listed separately. A $7,000 surgeon-only quote and a $12,000 all-in quote may represent the same procedure. Never compare quotes that do not break down the same cost components.
2
Mini, Full, and Deep-Plane Facelifts: How Procedure Type Drives the Price
The single biggest price driver for facelift surgery is the type of procedure. A mini or S-lift uses short incisions in front of and around the ears to lift and re-drape the skin of the lower face and jawline. Operating time is typically 1.5 to 2.5 hours, and the procedure can be performed under local anesthesia with or without light IV sedation in a physician office suite or ambulatory surgical center. Because the session is shorter, anesthesia costs and facility fees are lower, and the all-in range stays at $4,000 to $8,000. The trade-off is scope: a mini lift does not address the mid-face, deeper SMAS tissue, or the neck, making it most appropriate for patients in their mid-40s to mid-50s with mild to moderate lower-face laxity who are not yet ready for a full procedure.
A full traditional facelift (rhytidectomy) adds significant surgical depth and breadth. The surgeon accesses and repositions the SMAS layer, which gives the procedure its more natural, longer-lasting result compared to a skin-only lift. Operating time rises to 3 to 5 hours, requiring IV sedation or general anesthesia and a licensed accredited surgical center. Anesthesia and facility fees therefore rise significantly, and the surgeon's fee reflects both extended OR time and more complex tissue dissection. The resulting all-in range of $7,000 to $15,000 — roughly 75 to 90 percent more than a mini lift at mid-range — reflects these added components. Full facelifts are most appropriate for patients in their mid-50s to mid-70s with moderate to significant mid-face and jowl laxity.
Deep-plane facelifts represent the most comprehensive and technically demanding category. Rather than lifting and re-draping the SMAS from above, deep-plane technique releases the SMAS from its underlying attachments, allowing fat compartments and descended mid-face structures to be repositioned more vertically rather than laterally. This produces a more anatomically natural result, addresses nasolabial folds more directly, and is associated with longer-lasting outcomes — often 10 to 15 years compared to 5 to 10 years for a standard facelift. The surgical complexity demands a longer OR time (4 to 7 hours), general anesthesia, an accredited ASC or hospital setting, and a surgeon with specific deep-plane training and experience. These requirements drive the all-in range to $15,000 to $30,000. Not every patient is a candidate for deep-plane surgery, and not every surgeon offers it; the technique requires specific training that most general cosmetic physicians have not completed.
Facelift types compared by cost, technique, and expected longevity, 2026.
Feature
Mini / S-Lift
Full Facelift
Deep-Plane Facelift
All-in cost (2026)
$4,000–$8,000
$7,000–$15,000
$15,000–$30,000
OR time
1.5–2.5 hrs
3–5 hrs
4–7 hrs
Anesthesia
Local / light IV
IV or general
General
Tissue depth
Skin / superficial
SMAS layer
Deep to SMAS
Typical longevity
3–6 years
5–10 years
10–15 years
Longevity estimates are general market figures, not guarantees. Individual results depend on genetics, skin quality, sun exposure, weight changes, and the surgeon's technique. These ranges are meant for planning purposes only, not as outcome promises.
3
Neck Lift Add-On: What It Costs and Why Surgeons Recommend Combining It
A neck lift (platysmaplasty) addresses laxity and banding in the neck — the platysmal bands that create vertical cords, the submental fat that contributes to the appearance of a double chin, and the skin redundancy of the lower neck that often advances with age in parallel with facial laxity. When performed as a standalone procedure, a neck lift costs $5,000 to $9,000 all-in, covering the surgeon's fee, anesthesia, and surgical facility for a 1.5 to 3 hour session. When added to a facelift in the same session, it typically costs $3,000 to $6,000 extra, because the patient is already under anesthesia and the OR is already staffed and running. The combined approach saves one full round of anesthesia ($500 to $1,500) and surgical facility fees ($800 to $2,500), which is why the same-session addon represents a meaningful cost efficiency.
Beyond the financial argument, many plastic surgeons consider neck lifting to be anatomically inseparable from a full facelift. The transition from face to neck is a continuous aesthetic unit; addressing jowling and lower-face descent while leaving the neck untreated creates a visible mismatch that is immediately apparent in profile view. For full facelifts, most board-certified plastic surgeons will include at least a partial neck component as part of the procedure's standard scope. The additional $3,000 to $6,000 addon applies specifically when a full platysmaplasty — including midline plication of the platysma muscle, removal of submental fat, and repositioning of neck skin — is added beyond what a standard facelift scope would include.
For patients considering only a mini facelift who also have visible neck laxity, the math of staging versus combining deserves careful attention. A mini lift at $4,000 to $8,000 followed by a standalone neck lift at $5,000 to $9,000 in a separate session totals $9,000 to $17,000 for two rounds of anesthesia and two recovery periods. Upgrading to a full facelift with a neck lift in the same session costs $10,000 to $21,000 at the board-certified center tier — and may deliver a more durable result because the two procedures are addressed as one anatomical unit rather than sequentially. The right choice depends on individual anatomy and candidacy, which only a consultation can determine.
Facelift and neck lift cost scenarios, US, 2026.
Approach
Estimated All-In Cost
Rounds of Anesthesia
Facelift only (no neck lift)
$4,000–$30,000
1
Facelift + neck lift (same session)
+$3,000–$6,000 to base
1
Neck lift as standalone (later)
$5,000–$9,000 additional
2 total
Combining a neck lift with a facelift in the same session typically saves $2,000–$3,000 in anesthesia and facility overhead compared to staging them separately — and avoids a second recovery period.
4
Cosmetic Surgery Center vs. Board-Certified Plastic Surgeon for a Facelift
The provider choice is the second-largest price driver for facelift surgery, after procedure type. Board-certified plastic surgeons (certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery, ABPS) typically charge 20 to 28 percent more than cosmetic surgery centers for equivalent procedures. For a full facelift priced at $10,000 at a cosmetic center, the ABPS premium translates to $12,000 to $12,800 at an equivalent board-certified practice. The premium reflects real cost differences: ABPS surgeons carry higher malpractice insurance premiums (facelift is a high-litigation procedure), complete 6 years of surgical training plus an approved plastic surgery residency, and typically operate lower-volume practices with higher per-case overhead.
The distinction between providers matters most for facelift because of the complexity of the anatomy involved. Facelift surgery requires dissection through multiple tissue planes, precise management of facial nerve branches (which run directly through the operative field), and aesthetic judgment about tension vectors and tissue re-draping that directly affects how natural the result looks. For mini facelifts in straightforward candidates, an experienced cosmetic physician with high facelift volume and a strong track record can be an appropriate choice. For full and deep-plane facelifts, patients seeking revisions of prior work, and patients with significant skin laxity, heavy facial volume loss, or complex anatomy, the deeper training that ABPS certification represents translates directly into reduced complication risk and better aesthetic outcomes.
Vetting a provider for facelift should go beyond verifying credentials. Ask to see before-and-after photos of the surgeon's actual facelift patients — specifically patients with similar age, skin quality, and degree of facial laxity to yours. Ask how many facelifts the surgeon performs per year; volume and outcome consistency are correlated. Confirm which hospital the surgeon has privileges at, which is a proxy for credentialing — hospitals require peer review that cosmetic surgery centers do not. Confirm that a dedicated anesthesia provider (anesthesiologist or CRNA) will monitor you throughout, and that the facility holds AAAHC, JCAHO, or equivalent state accreditation. These questions cost nothing to ask and can prevent significant consequences.
Facelift provider types and cost comparison, 2026.
Provider Type
Typical Premium
Best For
Cosmetic surgery center
Baseline
Mini lift, straightforward candidates, high-volume practice
Ask the surgeon how many facelifts they perform per year and request a hospital privileges letter or credentialing documentation. Volume consistency and peer credentialing are proxies for quality that credentials alone do not capture.
5
When to Consult a Licensed Provider
The estimates this calculator produces are starting-point planning figures, not quotes and not medical guidance. Facelift surgery is a surgical procedure with real risks — including infection, hematoma, facial nerve injury, skin necrosis, hairline distortion, contour irregularity, visible scarring, and anesthesia complications — that no cost estimate can capture. Before any facial surgery decision, a consultation with a licensed, board-certified plastic surgeon is the only way to determine whether you are an appropriate candidate, which procedure type suits your anatomy and goals, what anesthesia approach is indicated for your health history, and what realistic results look like for your specific degree of facial aging.
When choosing a provider for a consultation, prioritize board certification in plastic surgery (American Board of Plastic Surgery) for full and deep-plane facelift procedures. Verify the surgical facility holds AAAHC, JCAHO, or state-equivalent accreditation. Confirm that a dedicated anesthesia provider — not just the surgeon — will monitor you throughout the procedure. Review before-and-after photographs of the surgeon's actual patients showing results on faces with similar age, laxity, and proportion to yours. Ask about the practice's post-operative protocol: who covers after-hours calls, how are hematomas managed if one develops within the first 24 hours, and what is the revision policy if a result is unsatisfactory.
If cost is a significant factor in your provider choice, consider financing through medical lending programs rather than compromising on surgeon credentials or facility accreditation. The gap between a $9,000 and an $11,500 facelift quote may represent the difference between an unaccredited and an accredited surgical setting, or between a surgeon with 50 facelift cases and one with 500. A complication or required revision can exceed the premium you were attempting to avoid, and the secondary consequences — asymmetry, nerve injury, or visible scarring — are not fully correctable by any follow-up procedure.
This calculator provides cost estimates for informational purposes only — it is not medical advice. Consult a licensed, board-certified plastic surgeon before making any facial surgery decision. Your health, anatomy, and goals require a professional assessment this tool cannot replace.
This calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered professional financial, medical, legal, or other advice. Always consult a qualified professional before making important decisions. UseCalcPro is not responsible for any actions taken based on calculator results.