Facelift vs. Neck Lift — Which Improves Your Profile?

Facelift vs. Neck Lift — Which Improves Your Profile?
Photo by Christopher Campbell / Unsplash

Updated November 2025

If you want a sharper jawline and a cleaner neck–chin angle, you’re likely comparing a facelift with a neck lift. Both rejuvenate the lower face, but they correct different anatomic problems. A facelift repositions deeper facial tissues (SMAS/platysma) to treat jowls and lower-face descent; a neck lift tightens loose neck skin, reduces submental fat, and repairs platysma bands to redefine the cervicomental angle.

The best choice depends on whether your main issue is jowling and lower-face laxity, neck laxity/banding, or both. Below, you’ll find candidates who should wait, a side-by-side comparison, key benefits, consultation pointers, alternatives, and FAQs—so you can choose confidently with a board-certified plastic or facial plastic surgeon.

Who Is a Good Candidate for a Facelift

You don’t need to check every box to be a candidate. Surgeons look for anatomy and goals that benefit from structural lifting.

Physical characteristics

  • Jowls and softened jawline from lower-face descent.
  • Midface descent contributes to deeper nasolabial/marionette folds.
  • Some neck laxity is common; many facelifts include neck work.

Lifestyle and expectations

  • Recovery window: typically 10–14 days of social downtime; refinement continues over weeks.
  • Durability preference: you want a longer-lasting structural change.
  • Natural result priority: refreshed—not over-pulled.

Who Is a Good Candidate for a Neck Lift

Neck lift focuses below the jawline to sharpen your profile.

Physical characteristics

  • Loose neck skin (“turkey wattle”), submental fullness, and/or platysma bands.
  • Blunted cervicomental angle that doesn’t improve with weight loss alone.
  • Good skin and tissue health for predictable redraping.

Lifestyle and expectations

  • Recovery window: usually 10–14 days of social downtime; swelling settles over weeks.
  • Realistic goals: a cleaner neck–chin angle and tighter skin without changing facial identity.

Who Should Avoid or Wait (Either Procedure)

  • Active nicotine use without willingness to pause pre/post-op (impairs healing).
  • Uncontrolled medical conditions (bleeding/clotting disorders, poorly controlled diabetes or hypertension) until optimized.
  • Major weight change planned soon—weight shifts can alter results.
  • Unrealistic expectations (e.g., scar-free surgery or device-level downtime for surgical outcomes).
  • Active skin infection or poor wound-healing history without a mitigation plan.

“Not now” often means “not yet.” Optimizing health, sun care, and timing can turn a borderline case into a strong candidate.

Facelift vs Neck Lift: Side-by-Side Comparison

Factor

Facelift

Neck Lift

Primary Goal

Reposition SMAS/platysma to correct jowls and lower-face laxity; may include midface support

Tighten neck skin, address platysma bands, refine submental fat to sharpen the profile

Best For

Softened jawline, jowls, midface descent with or without neck changes

“Turkey neck,” vertical bands, double chin, blunted cervicomental angle

Anatomy Addressed

Lower face (jawline) ± neck; deep tissue lift with skin redraping

Neck skin, platysma (midline repair/lateral suspension), submental fat

Impact on Profile

High via jawline definition; moderate on neck unless combined with neck work

High at the neck–chin angle and under-chin contour

Scars

Discreet around-ear ± small submental

Small incision under the chin + around/behind ears (hidden in creases/hairline)

Downtime (social)

~10–14 days

~10–14 days

Longevity

Long-lasting structural change; aging continues

Long-lasting neck refinement; aging continues

Can Combine With

Neck lift, eyelids, fat grafting, resurfacing

Facelift, submental lipo, chin implant (for projection)

Average Cost

See your city’s Cost page on AestheticMatch

See your city’s Cost page on AestheticMatch

How to decide:

  • If your main complaint is jowls and a soft jawline, you likely need a facelift (often with some neck work).
  • If your complaint is a blunted neck–chin angle, banding, or loose neck skin, a neck lift directly targets the profile.
  • Many patients benefit from a combined facelift + neck lift for the most balanced, natural look.

Key Benefits of Each Approach

Facelift

  • Jawline redefinition and improved lower-face contour.
  • Midface support to soften deep folds and restore cheek contour.
  • Durability from deeper tissue repositioning.

Neck Lift

  • Cervicomental angle restoration for a crisp profile.
  • Platysma band repair and targeted fat management.
  • Customizable (lipo, midline plication, lateral suspension) based on anatomy.

What to Expect During Consultation

Your consultation with a board-certified plastic or facial plastic surgeon is where candidacy and planning come together.

What your surgeon will evaluate

  • Jowl severity and lower-face descent (need for SMAS/platysma lifting).
  • Neck anatomy: skin laxity, platysma bands, submental and deeper fat compartments.
  • Chin/jaw projection: sometimes a chin implant improves profile synergy with either procedure.
  • Skin quality (sun damage, elasticity) and scar camouflage strategy.
  • Medical history (medications, bleeding risk, nicotine), event timeline, downtime tolerance.

Questions to ask

  • Do I need a facelift, neck lift, or both—and why?
  • Will you perform platysmaplasty or add submental liposuction?
  • How will you hide scars around the ear and under the chin?
  • What’s my realistic recovery (work, gym, events)?
  • How do you reduce risks of nerve injury, hematoma, seroma, and contour irregularities?
  • Would a chin implant or fat grafting improve balance in my profile?

Alternatives & Adjacent Options (If You’re Not Ready for Surgery)

  • Neuromodulators & fillers: camouflage early jowling, contour jawline/chin, soften bands (limited lift).
  • Energy-based tightening (RF microneedling, ultrasound): modest tightening for early laxity; maintenance required.
  • Submental liposuction alone: for fat-only fullness with good skin recoil (no skin/band correction).
  • Skincare & sun protection: supports texture, tone, and scar quality over time.

These options can be useful bridges or complements, but they don’t reproduce the vector-controlled lift of surgery when laxity is significant.

FAQs

Which procedure improves my profile more?
If the main issue is a blunted neck–chin angle or platysma bands, the neck lift makes the biggest difference. If jowls blur the jawline, a facelift restores definition—and combining the two optimizes both jawline and neck.

Can I do a neck lift without a facelift?
Yes. A standalone neck lift is common when concerns are primarily below the jawline. If jowls are significant, adding a facelift gives a more harmonious result.

Will a facelift fix my double chin?
A facelift improves the jawline; submental fat may still need liposuction and/or platysma repair—often done at the same time.

How long do results last?
Both deliver long-lasting improvements that age naturally with you. Good skincare, sun protection, and weight stability help preserve results.

Am I too young or too old?
Readiness is about anatomy, health, and goals—not just age. Healthy patients in their 40s with early jowls or in their 60s–70s with advanced laxity can be excellent candidates.

Talk to a Verified Surgeon

AestheticMatch connects you with board-certified plastic and facial plastic surgeons who can evaluate your anatomy, goals, and timeline—and recommend the safest, most effective plan, whether that’s a facelift, a neck lift, or a combination tailored to you.

Find Your Match

Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. All surgical procedures carry risks. Consult with a board-certified plastic or facial plastic surgeon to discuss your individual candidacy, risks, and expected outcomes.

Read more