
If you’re noticing sagging skin, deeper folds, or a loss of facial volume, you may be wondering whether a surgical facelift or a liquid facelift is the better solution. While both treatments can create a more youthful appearance, they work in very different ways. A surgical facelift repositions and tightens underlying tissues to address significant signs of aging, while a liquid facelift uses injectable treatments to restore volume, soften wrinkles, and enhance facial contours with little to no downtime.
At Miami Aesthetic, board-certified plastic surgeon Dr. Pat Pazmiño offers both options so you can choose what fits your goals. This guide breaks down how each treatment works, who each one suits, what recovery looks like, and how long the results last.
A surgical facelift repositions and tightens the deeper structures of the face – the SMAS layer – then removes excess skin for a smoother contour. It targets the aging that creams and injections cannot fully address: loose skin along the jawline, deep folds, jowling, and sagging in the mid-to-lower face and neck.
For patients who have also lost facial volume, Dr. Pat Pazmiño offers facial fat grafting, which uses your own fat to restore youthful fullness to areas like the cheeks – addressing both sagging and lost volume in a single surgical plan.
A liquid facelift is a non-surgical treatment that revitalizes the face using a strategic combination of injectables – typically completed in a single office visit with no incisions.
Dermal fillers restore lost volume, lift the cheeks, soften nasolabial folds, refresh the under-eye area, and define the jawline.
Botox and other neuromodulators relax muscles that cause wrinkles, such as frown lines, forehead lines, and crow’s feet.
This approach is ideal for early signs of aging or anyone seeking noticeable improvement without surgery.
The core difference is surgery versus injections:
Technique: A facelift involves incisions, tissue repositioning, and skin removal. A liquid facelift is a series of precise injections.
Targeted concerns: Surgery corrects structural sagging and skin laxity; injectables address volume loss and surface wrinkles.
Anesthesia: A facelift requires general anesthesia or deep sedation; a liquid facelift uses only topical numbing cream.
This single distinction drives every other difference: downtime, longevity, the degree of change, and how often you’ll return for upkeep.
A facelift performed by Dr. Pat Pazmiño is the gold standard for more advanced aging. It can:
Tighten loose, sagging skin on the cheeks and jawline
Reduce deep creases and folds around the nose and mouth
Correct loose skin and muscle banding in the neck (“turkey neck”), especially when combined with a neck lift
Address several areas of the face in one procedure
Deliver dramatic results that last many years
The goal is not to make you look like a different person, but to restore your facial structure to a more youthful state.
A liquid facelift is ideal for earlier or moderate signs of aging. It can:
Restore volume to hollowed cheeks and temples
Diminish the appearance of under-eye shadows
Soften smile lines and marionette lines
Provide a subtle lift to the brows, cheeks, and jawline
Smooth wrinkles caused by repeated muscle movement
Refresh your appearance with minimal interruption to daily life
The trade-off is that it works above the foundation rather than rebuilding it – it refreshes and restores, but doesn’t remove heavily sagging tissue.
A surgical facelift may be a strong fit if you:
Have moderate to severe skin laxity, particularly in the lower face and neck
Have deep folds that fillers can no longer smooth on their own
Want a dramatic, long-lasting solution
Are in good overall health and can accommodate a recovery period
A liquid facelift may be a better match if you:
Are noticing mild to moderate volume loss or fine lines
Want improvement but aren’t ready for or don’t need surgery
Have little time for downtime
Prefer to start with a less involved option and adjust gradually
At Miami Aesthetic, Dr. Pat Pazmiño believes treatments should be designed individually rather than with a one-size-fits-all approach. During a consultation – available in the office at our Miami location or through a Zoom i-Consult – he can morph photos on screen to help you visualize possible results before you commit.
The patient experience, from recovery time to the durability of results, varies significantly between these two procedures.
Surgical facelift: Recovery is gradual. Plan for about two weeks of downtime, when swelling and bruising are most prominent, and avoid strenuous activity for several weeks. You can be up and about a day after surgery, but visible signs take time to resolve.
Liquid facelift: Often called a “lunchtime lift,” it involves virtually no downtime. Minor swelling, redness, or bruising at injection sites usually subsides within a few days and can be covered with makeup. Most patients return to normal activities immediately.
Surgical facelift: Comprehensive and natural-looking – a smoother jawline, tighter neck, and softened folds. The final outcome appears once swelling subsides, typically within a few months, revealing a refreshed appearance built into the structure of your face.
Liquid facelift: Results are often visible almost immediately, with the full effect apparent within about two weeks as the fillers settle. The change is subtle and refreshing rather than dramatically altering.
Surgical facelift: Results are very long-lasting – many patients enjoy their rejuvenated appearance for ten years or more. A facelift turns back the clock but does not stop the aging process.
Liquid facelift: Results are temporary. Most dermal fillers last between 6 and 18 months, depending on the products and your metabolism, while neuromodulators like Botox typically last 3 to 4 months. Regular follow-up treatments maintain the results.
If permanence is your priority, surgery wins. If flexibility appeals to you, injectables offer the freedom to adjust your look over time.
Cost is rarely a simple comparison, because these treatments are priced and maintained in completely different ways.
A surgical facelift is a one-time investment covering the surgeon’s fee, facility costs, and anesthesia. The upfront cost is higher, but ongoing maintenance is minimal.
A liquid facelift has a lower cost per session, but because results fade, repeat visits over the years add up.
At Miami Aesthetic, pricing depends on the work needed and is determined during a consultation, since every plan is individualized. For patients who want to spread out the cost, CareCredit and Alphaeon Credit are offered as flexible financing options. We do not accept insurance for cosmetic procedures.
There’s no universal winner in the facelift vs liquid facelift debate – only the option that fits you. A surgical facelift delivers comprehensive, long-lasting results by lifting skin and deeper tissue, with a real recovery period. A liquid facelift offers a quick, non-surgical refresh using fillers and Botox, with little downtime and results you can update over time.
To find the right fit for your face and goals, schedule a personalized consultation with Dr. Pat Pazmiño at Miami Aesthetic by calling (305) 576-3443.

About the Author
Dr. Pat Pazmiño, MD, FACS

June 23, 2026