Common goals
- Heavy outer brow that makes eyes look tired or stern
- Brow asymmetry where one side sits noticeably lower
- Prior forehead Botox that flattened rather than lifted the brows
- Early brow descent not yet severe enough for surgical intervention
A brow that sits low or heavy — particularly on the outer corner — makes the eyes look tired, stern, or older without any underlying facial change. Strategic Botox placement relaxes the depressor muscles that pull the brow down while leaving the elevator muscles intact, producing a natural lift of 2 to 4 millimeters in the outer brow. The result is a more open, refreshed appearance that looks like good rest rather than treatment.
Standard forehead Botox targets the frontalis muscle and can flatten brows if not carefully planned. A brow lift protocol specifically targets the depressor muscles to allow the brow to lift, requiring precise placement and conservative dosing.
Most clients see 2 to 4 millimeters of outer brow elevation — subtle but visually significant. The result is an open, alert appearance without surgical-looking overcorrection.
Tell us your goals and we will map a natural-results plan around your timeline.