What to Bring to a Plastic Surgery Consultation
Updated November 2025
A great consultation feels calm, organized, and specific to you. A rushed one feels like a tour and a price quote. The difference usually comes down to preparation—what you bring, what you ask, and what you insist on taking home in writing.
This guide shows you exactly what to pack (physically and digitally), how to structure your notes, which documents to request, and what red flags to watch for.
Whether you’re considering a facelift, rhinoplasty, breast surgery, tummy tuck, BBL, or liposuction, this checklist turns your consult into a clear, safety-first plan.
Start with Safety (The Four Non-Negotiables)
Before the gallery, before the price, confirm the backbone of safe surgery:
- True board certification. For plastic surgery, look for American Board of Plastic Surgery (ABPS) certification—recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS).
- Hospital privileges. The surgeon should hold active privileges for the procedure you want—independent peer oversight and a transfer pathway if needed.
- Accredited facility. Ambulatory surgery centers should be accredited by AAAASF, The Joint Commission (JCAHO), or AAAHC.
- Qualified anesthesia, present the entire case. An MD anesthesiologist or CRNA should be in the room start-to-finish with modern monitoring (ECG, pulse oximetry, blood pressure, and capnography for moderate/deep sedation).
If any of these are vague or missing, pause. No result is worth compromised systems.
Your One-Page Brief (Bring This to Every Consult)
Create a concise, printed one-pager and a digital copy on your phone:
- Goals (one sentence per area)
- “Lower face/neck definition with natural hairline and earlobe position; avoid pulled look.”
- “Subtle dorsal refinement; preserve tip support; avoid pinched nostrils.”
- “Breast lift with proportionate upper-pole fullness; prioritize shape over minimal scars.”
- “Low, concealable tummy-tuck scar; strong diastasis repair; smooth waist transitions.”
- Top 3 priorities & 3 acceptances
- Priorities might include a natural look, scar placement, and functional improvement (breathing/core).
- Acceptances might include being okay with a thin scar, mild asymmetry, or a longer recovery for better contour.
- Reference photos (3–5 “like” + 1–2 “avoid”) Choose examples matching your starting anatomy, age range, and skin quality; annotate what you like/avoid.
- Logistics Note job type/return-to-work window, caregiving duties, travel constraints, and upcoming life events.
- Health snapshot List all medications/supplements (include HRT/COCs, GLP-1 or diabetes meds), allergies, prior surgeries, nicotine exposure, OSA/CPAP, clotting history, and dry-eye symptoms (for eyelids).
- Pace rule Decide in advance: “I don’t make same-day decisions; please email documents.” Ethical teams will support this.
The Physical Folder: What to Pack
- Photo ID (and insurance card if applicable, even for self-pay)
- Printed one-page brief and meds/supplement list with doses and schedules
- Relevant medical records (mammogram/ultrasound for breast work; prior op notes if available; PCP/endo notes for diabetes/thyroid; ophthalmology notes for blepharoplasty)
- Allergy list (medications, latex, adhesives, antiseptics)
- Notebook and pen (or tablet/phone notes app)
- Measuring aids if asked (supportive non-padded bra for breast measurements; hair tie/clip for facelift photos)
- Small comfort items (water, lip balm—consults can run long)
The Digital Kit: What to Have on Your Phone
- A zipped folder with your reference photos and a copy of your one-page brief
- A notes template or checklist for answers, timestamps, and follow-ups
- A “scars & photos” review grid (timepoints: 6 weeks, 3 months, 1 year)
- A short message ready to request permission if you’d like to record an audio snippet for personal use
Questions to Ask During Your Consultation (Print This Table)
Take notes on exact phrasing. Strong practices answer clearly and provide documents.
What to Request Before You Leave (Receipts, Not Promises)
Ask for these in writing (email is fine):
- Confirmation of ABPS certification and active hospital privileges for your procedure
- Facility accreditation certificate and most recent inspection date
- Anesthesia details (provider credentials, continuous presence, monitoring standards including capnography, PONV and multimodal pain plans)
- Comparable, standardized photos with visible scars and 3/6/12-month labels
- Recovery roadmap (activity restrictions, garments, sitting/positioning rules, driving/work windows)
- DVT prevention plan (compression devices, early ambulation, medication if indicated)
- Written revision policy (timing, criteria, typical costs)
- After-hours contact and the follow-up schedule
- Itemized quote (surgeon, anesthesia, facility, garments/meds, likely extras, payment/cancellation terms)
If a clinic won’t provide documentation, that is your answer.
How to Review Before-and-After Photos in the Office
Bring your grid and look for:
- Standardization: same lighting, background, distance, and angles
- Comparability: patients like you (starting anatomy, age, skin tone/quality)
- Timelines: 6-week, 3-month, and 12-month labels (early “wow” photos can mislead)
- Scar honesty: incisions visible where they truly live (behind-ear lines, lift patterns, tummy-tuck line)
- Consistency: many steady results beat one dramatic transformation
- Diversity: range of body types, ages, and skin tones indicates breadth and transparency
If you only see tightly curated highlights, ask for more matched cases or reconsider.
Red Flags to Watch for (Two or More? Slow Down.)
- “Board-certified” without naming which board, or only non-ABMS cosmetic boards
- No active hospital privileges for your procedure
- Non-accredited facility or refusal to show accreditation proof and inspection date
- Vague anesthesia plan; no promise of continuous presence; no capnography for moderate/deep sedation
- Guarantees (“scarless,” “no downtime,” “perfect symmetry”), time-limited sales pressure
- Only early “after” photos; scars hidden; no matched cases like you
- Thin post-op access; no clear after-hours pathway
- Surprise fees; no itemized quote; no written revision policy
Thank them for their time and keep looking.
What to Bring by Procedure (Small Tweaks, Big Clarity)
Facelift/Neck Lift
- Hair tie/clip for photography of hairline and behind-ear areas
- Notes about sideburn preservation and earlobe position preferences
- Questions about neck depth, platysma work, and swelling timeline
Rhinoplasty
- “Like/avoid” photos (profile and frontal)
- Breathing goals (snoring, mouth-breathing)
- Questions about tip support, alar base, thick-skin expectations, and function
Breast Lift/Augmentation/Reduction
- Non-padded, supportive bra for measurements
- Preferences for upper-pole fullness vs. size; comfort with lift scar patterns
- Recent imaging if relevant; ask about capsular contracture counseling
Abdominoplasty
- Notes on hernias, C-section scar concerns, back pain/posture
- Questions on diastasis repair technique, scar placement, garment choreography, DVT prevention
Liposuction/BBL
- Projection examples you consider natural for your frame
- Readiness to follow strict sitting/off-loading rules; bring schedule constraints to plan time off
- Ask for volume philosophy, operative time limits, and staging criteria
Blepharoplasty
- Eye-care notes (dryness, contact lens habits, visual field concerns)
- Questions on local + sedation vs. general; monitoring; compress/ointment routine
- Ask for open/closed-eye photos across timepoints
Using Reviews and Reputation Wisely (Bring a Shortlist)
Before the consult, gather reviews across a few platforms and note patterns from the last 12–24 months:
- What reviewers praise: expectation setting, after-hours access, consistent follow-up, honest scar talk
- What reviewers critique: rushed consults, unreachable after-hours, surprise fees, pressured add-ons, missing long-term photos
- How the practice responds: professional tone and offline resolution beat defensiveness
Bring two or three review-based questions (for example, “Several reviewers praised your same-day seroma management—what’s your protocol?”). Reputation should match reality in the room.
Day-Of Flow: What a Good Consult Feels Like
- Goal recap: the surgeon restates your goals and trade-offs.
- Exam & candidacy: anatomy-specific limits explained candidly.
- Technique & plan: options, scar locations, anesthesia approach; staging if appropriate.
- Risk & prevention: personalized DVT plan, infection control, emergency readiness.
- Recovery logistics: garments, sitting/positioning, driving/work windows, scar care.
- Photo review: multiple matched cases, honest scars, time-labeled results.
- Pricing & policy: itemized quote, revision policy, after-hours access, follow-ups.
- Zero pressure: you’re encouraged to review documents and ask more questions.
If you feel hurried, ask for a second visit or a virtual follow-up to finish calmly.
FAQs
Can I bring a friend or family member?
Yes—an extra set of ears helps. Choose someone calm who respects your goals and pace.
Is it okay to record?
Ask permission first. Most practices allow short audio notes for personal use.
Should I bring payment in case I want to book?
You can, but decide your pace beforehand. Taking documents home to review is safer than same-day commitments.
What if I don’t understand a risk or term?
Ask for plain-language explanations. Good teams teach clearly and provide written summaries.
How soon should I expect follow-up materials?
Within a few business days is typical for documents, photos, and quotes. If materials never arrive, that’s a red flag.
Your “What to Bring” Master Checklist (No Symbols)
Paper & IDs
- Photo ID (plus insurance card if applicable)
- Printed one-page brief (goals, priorities/acceptances, logistics, health snapshot)
- Full meds/supplement list with doses and schedules
- Relevant medical records (imaging, prior op notes if available)
- Allergy list (meds/latex/adhesives/antiseptics)
Digital
- Reference photos (3–5 like, 1–2 avoid)
- Notes template or checklist for answers
- Space to save emailed documents (accreditation, quotes, policies)
Ask & Document
- ABPS certification and hospital privileges (confirmed and saved)
- Facility accreditation and inspection date (copy saved)
- Anesthesia details (provider credentials, continuous presence, monitoring including capnography)
- Comparable, standardized photos (scars visible; 3/6/12-month labels)
- Recovery roadmap (restrictions, garments, positioning, work/drive windows)
- DVT prevention plan (compression, early ambulation, meds if indicated)
- Written revision policy (timing, criteria, typical costs)
- After-hours contact and follow-up schedule
- Itemized quote (surgeon, anesthesia, facility, garments/meds, likely extras; payment/cancellation terms)
Pace
- No same-day booking; review calmly at home
- Schedule a second visit or virtual Q&A if needed
Find Your Match
Ready to turn preparation into a confident, safety-first decision?
AestheticMatch connects you with board-certified, pre-vetted plastic surgeons who operate in accredited facilities and provide transparent documentation before you book.