Men and cosmetic injectables

Lip Filler for Men

More men than ever present for lip assessment at Core Aesthetics. The goal is almost never volume. It is definition, symmetry, and proportion. The approach is different from treating a female patient, and that difference matters.

Quick summary

Lip filler is not a female-only treatment. Men present for lip assessment at Core Aesthetics for definition, asymmetry correction, age-related volume loss, and proportion. The clinical approach for male patients differs significantly from female treatment: lower lip dominance, conservative volume targets, and deliberate avoidance of feminising features. A consultation is required before any treatment is considered. Results vary between individuals. This page was prepared by Corey Anderson, Registered Nurse (AHPRA NMW0001047575) at Core Aesthetics, Oakleigh.

Where the assumption comes from

Cosmetic injectable treatment has been marketed almost exclusively towards women for most of its clinical history. The imagery, the language, and the clinical environments were built around a female patient. That framing left a lasting impression: that lip enhancement specifically was not something men do or should consider.

The clinical reality does not support that framing. Lips are a structural feature of the face. They are subject to the same genetic variation, asymmetry, and age-related change in men as they are in women. Whether treatment is appropriate depends on individual anatomy and what the patient is trying to address, not on gender.

Male and female facial ageing follow different patterns. The structural changes that affect the lips are part of a broader picture that affects the lower face over time. That broader picture is what Corey Anderson, registered nurse at Core Aesthetics, assesses at consultation.

Attitudes are shifting. Men now represent a meaningful and growing proportion of cosmetic injectable patients, including for treatments that were historically framed as female-specific. Lip assessment is one of them.

What male patients are typically asking for

The starting point in a male lip consultation is different from a female one. Not in clinical rigour, but in what the patient is presenting with and what outcome they are working towards. Getting this wrong produces results that are obvious for the wrong reasons.

The goal for most male patients is definition, not volume. That distinction shapes everything about the treatment plan.

The four most common presenting concerns are: structural definition, where some men have lips that lack a clear border and subtle treatment can create edge definition without changing the overall shape of the lip; asymmetry correction, where uneven lip volume or height is common and often more visible in men because male facial features tend to be more angular; age-related volume loss, where lips thin with age and in men this often creates a compressed or flat appearance around the mouth (results vary between individuals); and proportion, where lips that are disproportionately small for the rest of the face affect perceived harmony, with treatment in this context being about balance assessed individually at consultation.

Related reading: men’s guide to cosmetic injectables, best injectable treatments for men, why do lips look thinner with age.

Why the approach is different for men

This is where clinical judgement matters most. Treating a male patient using the same framework applied to a female patient produces results that do not look right. The anatomy is different. The aesthetic goals are different. The proportions being worked towards are different.

Male lip proportions. In a masculine face, the lower lip is typically the dominant feature. The upper lip carries definition but not prominence. Treating a male patient towards the upper lip ratios common in female treatment produces a result that reads as feminised. The objective is to improve the existing structure on its own terms, not to remodel it towards a different aesthetic framework.

Conservative volume targets. Most male patients require less product than female patients to achieve their goal. Overcorrection is not an inherent risk of the treatment. It is a consequence of poor planning and misaligned goals. A realistic volume target is established at consultation before any treatment proceeds. Avoiding overfilled lips in any patient begins with the assessment, not the syringe.

Which features to leave alone. The Cupid’s bow, the philtral columns, the lip border projection: these structural elements carry very different aesthetic meaning in male versus female anatomy. In a considered male treatment plan, the practitioner needs to be clear about which features to work with and which to leave entirely. This is a clinical judgement that depends on the individual patient’s anatomy, assessed at consultation.

The key differences at a glance:

ConsiderationFemale presentationMale presentation
Upper to lower lip ratioUpper lip often the focusLower lip typically dominant; upper lip definition only
Cupid’s bowOften enhancedGenerally left natural; prominent Cupid’s bow can feminise
Volume targetVariable, often higherConservative; definition before volume
Vermilion borderMay be sharpened for definitionSubtle only; a sharp border can appear unnatural in men
Primary goalFullness, symmetry, proportionDefinition, symmetry, age restoration

Questions male patients ask at consultation

Will it look obvious? This is the most consistent concern. The honest answer is that it depends almost entirely on the treatment plan, the volume used, and whether the practitioner understands male facial anatomy. Treatment designed around male proportions, using conservative volumes, should not be detectable as cosmetic intervention. What becomes obvious is treatment that is excessive or anatomically misaligned. That is a planning failure, not an unavoidable outcome.

Is this actually appropriate for men? Clinically, there is no anatomical or procedural reason why lip treatment is more appropriate for one gender than another. The practical considerations are the same across all patients: goals, anatomy, and appropriate volume. Gender is not a clinical variable. Suitability is assessed individually at consultation. Corey Anderson has worked with male aesthetic patients throughout 30 years of clinical practice.

What is the recovery like? Swelling and bruising are the most common post-treatment effects, and both are more pronounced around the mouth than at most other injection sites. The degree varies between individuals. Most patients find noticeable swelling resolves within a few days. The settled result is typically visible at around two weeks. Timing relative to significant commitments is discussed at consultation. See also the lip filler aftercare guide.

How long does it last? Lip filler is one of the shorter-duration filler placements. Most patients see structural effect for between six and twelve months. The constant movement of the lips exposes the product to greater mechanical and metabolic turnover than mid-face placements, which shortens duration. Individual variation is significant. Results vary between individuals. More on how long lip filler lasts.

Does it hurt? The lip area has a high density of nerve endings. Most patients describe discomfort during placement. Topical numbing is offered before treatment. More on what to expect with lip filler and discomfort.

Further reading: lip filler Melbourne, first time lip filler, lip filler assessment, lip flip vs lip filler, clinical example: subtle lip enhancement.

What happens at a lip consultation for men

In Australia, dermal fillers are prescription substances. A consultation is not a formality. It is a clinical appointment and a legal requirement. At Core Aesthetics, no treatment is performed at the consultation. The consultation is where the treatment decision is made.

  1. Medical history and suitability. Medical history, current medications, and any relevant health considerations are reviewed. Lip filler is not appropriate for everyone. Suitability is established before any treatment plan is discussed.
  2. Facial and lip assessment. Corey assesses lip anatomy, facial proportions, natural movement, and the specific concerns brought to the appointment. For male patients, this includes an explicit assessment of which features to address and which to leave alone.
  3. Treatment discussion. The proposed approach is explained: what volume is being considered, where it will be placed, what a realistic outcome looks like, and what it will not achieve. Risks, side effects, and aftercare are covered in full. Questions are expected.
  4. Prescription and informed consent. If treatment is appropriate and the patient wants to proceed, a prescription is issued and informed consent is obtained. Treatment does not proceed without both.
  5. Treatment and review. Treatment is delivered in clinic. A conservative first volume is standard. A review appointment is offered at two to four weeks to assess the settled result before any further decision is made.

On discretion

Core Aesthetics is a one-practitioner clinic at a private address in Oakleigh. There is no shared waiting room, no front desk team, and no situation where you are likely to encounter someone you know during an appointment. The clinic is appointment only.

Many male patients value this structure. The consultation is a confidential clinical appointment. Corey does not discuss patients with other patients and does not use patient imagery in any public context. For patients to whom privacy matters, and many to whom it does across all genders, this is worth knowing before booking.

Core Aesthetics, Oakleigh

Core Aesthetics is at 12A Atherton Road, Oakleigh VIC 3166. Corey Anderson (AHPRA registration NMW0001047575, registered since January 1996) is the sole treating practitioner. Every consultation, treatment, and review appointment is with Corey personally.

Lip filler consultations for men are available Tuesday to Saturday by appointment. For men seeking treatment across the broader scope of cosmetic injectables, including anti-wrinkle treatment, masseter treatment, and jawline and chin filler, these are assessed at the same consultation and can be planned as a coordinated treatment sequence where appropriate.

Men’s treatment cluster: men’s cosmetic injectables, men’s anti-wrinkle, masseter treatment, jawline filler, jawline and chin filler guide, men’s aesthetics Oakleigh, best injectable treatments for men, men’s guide to cosmetic injectables.

You can verify Corey’s registration at coreaesthetics.com.au/verify or directly through the AHPRA public register.

Is this for you?

Consider booking a consultation if

  • Men considering lip treatment who want to understand the consultation and individual assessment process
  • Men 18 or older in general good health who want to discuss lip anatomy, proportion, and realistic goals before any treatment is considered
  • Men noticing age-related lip thinning, asymmetry, or lack of definition who want a clinical assessment of whether treatment is appropriate
  • Men who value a private, one-practitioner clinical environment for their appointment

This may not be for you if

  • Anyone under 18
  • Anyone who is pregnant, trying to conceive, or breastfeeding
  • Anyone with an active infection, cold sore, or unhealed skin in the lip area
  • Anyone with a history of severe allergic reaction to hyaluronic acid or lidocaine
  • Anyone seeking a pre-decided volume or a specific look without individual clinical assessment

Suitability is confirmed at consultation. This list is general guidance, not a substitute for clinical assessment.

Frequently asked questions

Can men get lip filler?

Yes. There is no anatomical or clinical reason why lip treatment is more appropriate for one gender than another. The assessment, volume targets, and aesthetic goals for male patients differ significantly from female treatment. Suitability is determined at consultation. Results vary between individuals.

Will lip filler look feminine on a man?

Only if it is done without accounting for male facial anatomy. A practitioner who understands male lip proportions, lower lip dominance, conservative volume, and which features to leave alone, will produce a result that enhances the existing structure without feminising it. Over-treated or improperly planned lip filler looks unnatural on anyone. The assessment at consultation is where this is established.

What do men typically want from lip filler?

Most male patients presenting at Core Aesthetics are seeking definition, asymmetry correction, or restoration of volume lost with age. Very few are seeking significant size increase. The clinical framing for male lip treatment is different from female treatment, and Corey Anderson’s assessment accounts for this difference at every consultation.

How is lip filler for men different from lip filler for women?

The differences are primarily in proportion targets, volume, and which structural features are treated. In masculine anatomy, the lower lip is typically dominant. The Cupid’s bow and upper lip prominence are generally left alone or treated very conservatively. Total volume is usually lower. The assessment considers the whole face and the patient’s specific anatomy rather than applying a standard template.

How long does lip filler last for men?

Lip filler is one of the shorter-duration filler placements regardless of gender. Most patients see structural effect for between six and twelve months. The lips are constantly in motion, which means higher metabolic and mechanical turnover compared to mid-face placements. Individual variation is significant. Results vary between individuals. Longevity is discussed at consultation based on individual assessment.

Is the consultation private?

Core Aesthetics is a one-practitioner clinic at a private address in Oakleigh. There is no shared waiting area and no front desk team. Appointments are individual and confidential. Corey does not discuss patient information with other patients and does not use patient imagery in any public context.

Do I need to have had injectables before to consider lip treatment?

No. Many patients presenting for a first lip assessment at Core Aesthetics have no prior injectable history. The consultation is the starting point regardless of experience. Corey assesses your anatomy, medical history, and goals before any treatment plan is discussed. First-time patients are seen in exactly the same way as established patients.

What is the minimum age for lip filler?

18. All cosmetic injectable patients must be 18 or older. This applies to all patients and all treatments. AHPRA guidelines for registered health practitioners explicitly address the treatment of minors in the context of cosmetic procedures.

Clinical references

  1. TGA: Regulation of cosmetic injectables in Australia
  2. AHPRA: Guidelines for registered health practitioners in cosmetic procedures
  3. ACCSM: Public information for patients

Written and reviewed by Corey Anderson RN, AHPRA NMW0001047575 · Reviewed 2026-05-05 · TGA & AHPRA compliant

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