4-things-to-know-about-lip-filler-injections

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4 Things to Know About Lip Filler Injections

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Lip filler is one of the most commonly performed cosmetic treatments in the UK — and one of the most variable in how well it’s performed across different practitioners and clinics. For patients considering their first lip filler treatment, four key things make the difference between a result that looks natural and refined versus one that’s disappointing, overfilled, or actively problematic.

This guide covers what we believe are the four most important things every prospective lip filler patient should understand before booking their first appointment: what HA filler actually is and how it differs from older products; why injector experience and clinical setting matter substantially; how volume choices affect both immediate appearance and long-term tissue outcomes; and what to expect from the procedure, recovery, and ongoing maintenance.

1. Not all “lip filler” is the same — what hyaluronic acid filler actually is

The term “lip filler” covers a range of products with very different properties. Understanding what’s actually being injected is the foundation of safe and effective treatment.

Hyaluronic acid (HA) filler — the modern standard. HA is a naturally occurring substance in the human body, found in skin, joints, and connective tissue. Modern lip fillers are made of cross-linked HA gel produced through bacterial fermentation (not animal-derived). The HA in filler is chemically identical to what’s already in your tissue, which means:

Major HA filler brands used in the UK include Juvederm, Restylane, Belotero, and Teosyal. At Centre for Surgery, our injector chooses among HA products based on the specific characteristics needed for each and treatment area.

Non-HA “permanent” fillers — to be avoided. Various or semi-permanent fillers exist (PMMA, silicone, gel). Despite marketing as a “one-time” solution, these produce worse long-term outcomes than HA fillers, can’t be dissolved if problems develop, and carry higher risks of late complications including granuloma formation and chronic infection. See our detailed guide on .

The product matters. Before treatment, ask:

Reputable clinics answer all these questions . Reluctance to provide specifics is a warning sign.

For comprehensive guidance on lip filler products generally, see our and our .

2. Who’s injecting matters more than where you go

The UK regulatory environment for cosmetic injectables is permissivefillers are classified as medical devices rather than prescription medications, meaning practitioners with relatively limited training can legally administer them. This puts substantial on patients to verify they’re being by someone genuinely qualified.

Look for:

Warning signs:

The cost difference between treatment in a CQC-regulated clinic with experienced medical professionals and treatment in less regulated settings reflects real differences in safety standards, product quality, and capability.

At Centre for Surgery, all lip filler is performed in our CQC-regulated clinic by experienced practitioners with medical qualifications and substantial cosmetic training. This isn’t the cheapest option in the London market, but it reflects the safety standards we believe patients deserve.

3. Less is usually more — volume choices matter long-term

One of the most common mistakes in lip filler is over-volume treatment. Several factors converge to push patients toward larger volumes than they actually need:

Visual “results” are more dramatic with more volume. Patients seeking visible change after their first treatment may feel they “didn’t get enough” if conservative volumes were used.

Social media aesthetics. Influencer has normalised lip that look substantial in photos but appear unnatural in person.

Per-volume pricing. Some clinics price filler by syringe rather than by treatment outcome, creating economic incentive to use full syringes even when partial would suffice.

Patient expectation calibration. Patients exposed to overfilled lip aesthetics may not realise that conservative lip filler can still meaningful, attractive enhancement.

The reality:

Long-term implications. Patients who start with aggressive volumes often progress to increasingly large treatments over years, accumulating filler that doesn’t fully metabolise between . This is the that produces the “overfilled” appearance, lip stretching concerns, and migration above the vermillion border. See our guides on and .

The Cupid’s bow alternative. Some patients want enhancement with conservative by on Cupid’s bow definition rather than overall volume . This produces refined, recognisable change with as little as 0.3-0.5ml. See our dedicated guide on .

The natural-looking objective. The aim of good lip filler is for and family to think you look different (well-rested, refreshed) without being able to identify what’s changed. This is achieved with restraint, not maximalism.

4. What to expect from the procedure and beyond

the full timeline — from pre-treatment preparation through recovery to ongoing maintenance — helps set realistic expectations.

Pre-treatment (1 week before):

Day of treatment:

First 24 hours:

Days 2-7 (peak swelling):

Weeks 1-2 (settling phase):

Weeks 2-26 (stable result):

Months 6-12 (gradual dissipation):

Annual maintenance:

For comprehensive detail, see our and our guides on and .

Cost and what you’re paying for

Lip filler at Centre for Surgery is priced per syringe of filler used, plus the consultation and procedure fee:

What you’re paying for at a CQC-regulated clinic with experienced medical practitioners:

, including 0% APR, are available across all treatments.

Significantly cheaper treatment elsewhere typically reflects savings in one or more of these areas. Patients should consider what specifically is being economised on before choosing the cheaper option.

When lip filler might not be the right answer

For some patients, lip filler isn’t the most appropriate treatment:

Elongated . For patients whose upper lip looks recessive because the distance from nose to lip is too long, no amount of filler addresses the underlying anatomy. is the appropriate intervention.

Mild gummy smile. Subtle gummy smile better to than to filler. See our .

Established perioral lines. Significant smoker’s lines around the upper lip aren’t well-addressed by lip filler alone — see our for more appropriate .

Body dysmorphic tendencies. Patients who fixate on minor concerns rarely benefit from cosmetic treatmentadditional typically increases rather than reduces . Honest assessment is more important than further intervention.

Cost-sensitive patients. Ongoing lip filler maintenance accumulates substantial cost over years. Patients who would otherwise need this for decades may be better served by surgical lip lift as a alternative.

Pregnancy or breastfeeding. Lip filler isn’t recommended during pregnancy or breastfeeding — wait until the postnatal period.

Common questions

Mild to moderate discomfort during injection — like multiple small pinches. Topical anaesthetic substantially reduces this, and the lidocaine in modern fillers adds further comfort. Most patients tolerate the treatment well without dental block anaesthesia.

HA filler can be with hyalase within hours, returning your lips to baseline. This is one of the main safety advantages of HA filler. See our .

With volumes and experienced technique, very natural. The aim is enhanced lips that don’t look like they’ve “had something done.”

Most patients are presentable within hours, especially with cold compresses and arnica. Final result settled at 2 weeks.

For continued enhancement, yes — every 9-12 months typically. Stopping treatment returns lips to baseline naturally.

Yes — typically. A consultation discusses the sequencing of multiple treatments.

Patients with a history of cold sores may want prophylactic antiviral medication before treatment. Discuss with your practitioner.

Lip implants exist but are rarely used at experienced clinics due to high revision rates and palpability issues. Lip lift surgery is typically a better permanent alternative.

18+ for legal reasons. Most clinicsincluding Centre for Surgery — won’t treat patients younger than this regardless of consent.

Subtle natural asymmetry is universal and often part of what makes faces individually recognisable. Filler can address modest asymmetry but won’t fully asymmetry that has causes. Realistic expectations are essential.

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 specialist . Our 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 on London’s iconic , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.

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Lara Sena
Author: Lara Sena

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