Considering jawline filler in houston? Start with a consultation.
Book Consultation(opens in a new tab)What it treats
- A soft or undefined jawline that lacks a crisp border
- Loss of definition along the mandible with age
- A lower face out of proportion with the mid and upper face
- Pre-jowl hollows that break up the jawline
- A weak jaw angle (gonial angle) on the profile view
- Mild asymmetry between the two sides of the jaw
Products used in this treatment: Restylane Lyft, Restylane Defyne, Evolysse Form
What a defined jawline actually depends on
A sharp jawline is not one thing. It is three things stacked together: the bone underneath, the skin over it, and what sits below the chin. Filler only addresses one of those well.
The bone - your mandible and its angle - is the scaffold. If the underlying jaw is set back or the gonial angle is soft, HA filler can project the line outward and build a crisper edge. This is the part filler does honestly well.
Skin laxity is the second factor. As collagen and elastin decline, the skin along the jaw loosens and the line blurs into early jowling. Filler can support and lift a little, but it will not tighten loose skin. If laxity is the main driver, I will say so. Adding filler to significant laxity usually just makes the lower face heavier, not sharper.
The third factor is what is under the chin - submental fullness. Some of that is fat, some is skin, some is muscle banding. None of it is a filler problem. A "double chin" of fat is a genuinely different conversation, and I would rather tell you that at consult than sell you syringes that cannot reach it.
Honest candidacy: what filler will and will not do
Good candidates have decent skin quality and want more edge along a jaw that is soft or under-projected. For these patients filler builds real definition. The before-and-after on the profile view can be striking.
Where I pump the brakes: significant skin laxity and submental fat. Filler does not fix either one. If your main concern is loose skin along the jaw or fullness under the chin, more HA is not the answer, and I am not going to pretend otherwise. Those are different treatment categories, and some are outside what I offer in this office. I would rather have an honest scope conversation than chase a result the product cannot deliver.
A clinical aside on goals. There is a difference between "more defined" and "wider." Patients sometimes ask for a stronger jaw and mean a sharper line; others mean a squarer, broader face. Filler placed along the border and at the angle sharpens definition. Pushing for dramatic width is a different plan, often a poor fit for a patient's facial shape, and easy to overdo. I want to know which goal you actually have before I pick up a needle.
The lower face works as a unit: chin plus jawline
I rarely treat the jawline in isolation. The chin and the jaw read together on the profile, and a recessed or short chin will undercut even a well-defined jawline. When the chin is set back, projecting it slightly first gives the jawline something to anchor to, and the whole lower third looks more balanced.
So a typical plan might combine chin filler for projection with jawline filler for the border and angle. Sometimes it is jawline only. Occasionally the cheeks are the real lever - a flat mid-face can make the lower face look heavier than it is, and supporting the cheek lifts the whole structure. We map this at consult rather than guessing.
A second clinical aside. Filler in the lower face is mostly a deep, on-bone placement using firmer, more structural products. That is a different technique than the soft, superficial work in lips. It is why product selection here leans structural.
Jawline filler vs jawline-slimming Botox - not the same treatment
This is the single most common mix-up I see, so I want to be plain about it. Filler and slimming neurotoxin are opposite tools that happen to share the word "jawline."
Jawline filler adds HA along the mandibular border to create structure and a sharper edge. It is for a soft or undefined jaw. It builds the line out.
Jawline-slimming neurotoxin does the reverse. It relaxes the masseter, the chewing muscle at the back of the jaw, so that an overdeveloped masseter gradually shrinks and a wide, square lower face narrows. It removes bulk. If your concern is that the jaw looks too wide, filler is the wrong call - that is a jawline-slimming Botox conversation.
And yes, some patients benefit from both. Narrow an overbuilt masseter with neurotoxin, then define the border with filler once the width has settled. The two are not in competition; they solve different problems. At consult I sort out which one your anatomy is actually asking for, or whether it is the combination.
Products, onset, longevity, and downtime
For the jawline I reach for structural HA fillers - ones engineered to hold their shape against the firm tissue and movement of the lower face. Restylane Lyft is a workhorse for projection and lift along the angle. Restylane Defyne flexes a bit more for the moving part of the jaw near the chin. Evolysse Form, the newer Evolysse option, integrates softly and is a good fit when I want structure without stiffness. Which one, and how much, depends on your starting anatomy.
You see structure immediately, but the honest timeline includes swelling for the first several days, so the true result is what you see at the two-week mark, not at the mirror in my chair. I bring most jawline patients back at two weeks to assess the settled line and add small touches if the plan calls for it.
Longevity in this area tends to run on the longer end for HA - often in the range of a year to 18 months for structural lower-face work - though that varies with the product, the amount, your metabolism, and how much the area moves. I will give you a realistic range for your specific plan rather than a single number.
Downtime is modest. Plan on bruising and swelling for roughly 3 to 7 days; firmer products in the lower face can feel a touch swollen or firm to the touch early on, which eases as it integrates. Most people go back to work the same day and time any social events for after the first week.
One reassurance that is specific to HA: it is dissolvable. Every filler I use here can be reversed with hyaluronidase if you do not like the result or if I ever need to adjust placement. That reversibility is a real safety net and part of why I stay in the HA family for the jawline.
Pricing and Houston logistics
Jawline filler is priced by the syringe, and lower-face contouring often uses more product than people expect because you are building structure across a length of bone on both sides. That means I am not going to quote a flat number on a webpage. I price it at consult once I see how many syringes your plan actually needs and whether the chin is part of it. I would rather be accurate than cheap-sounding.
We are at 2401 N. Shepherd Dr., Ste. 229, at 24th and Shepherd in the Houston Heights, just south of I-610. Parking is free under the building, which spares you the street-parking hunt that the Heights is known for. Easy in from the Heights, Garden Oaks, the Greater Heights, and the inner Loop generally. Plan on about 45 to 75 minutes for a first jawline appointment, including the time we spend talking through what is realistic.
