How Much Does the Nefertiti Neck Lift Cost?
Published on | Written by Alec Pow
This article was researched using 15 sources. See our methodology and corrections policy.
A Nefertiti neck lift is a Botox-style injection pattern placed along the jawline and upper neck to relax parts of the platysma muscle. It is used for mild neck banding and a sharper lower-face contour, not for removing loose skin or suctioning fat.
How Much Does the Nefertiti Neck Lift Cost?
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In the U.S., published self-pay quotes for a single visit have been cited at $500 (that's 2.1 workdays of your life at a $30/hr wage, or $200 in 1990 money) to $2,000, with about 20 to 50 units used in many cases and results that wear off after about three months, per a September 2024 writeup.
Your total is usually built from three parts, product, injector time, and the clinic’s follow-up rules. Some offices bill per unit, others bill per area, and a second visit for a touch-up can reset your budget even if the first session looked modest. For a broader benchmark, the American Society of Plastic Surgeons lists an average cost of $435 (about $170 in 1990 money) for botulinum toxin injections (not including extra fees some clinics add), per latest ASPS statistics.
Quotes are per visit, not per month. Unit counts move with platysma strength, injector technique, and whether the jawline is treated together with neck bands. A major metro rate can push the same unit plan higher, and bundled follow-ups can change what you pay inside the same quarter.

Important numbers
- Publicly cited Nefertiti lift quotes run $500 (about $200 in 1990 money) to $2,000 per visit.
- Commonly cited dosing runs about 20 to 50 units for the pattern.
- Botulinum toxin injection averages are listed at $435 in ASPS statistics.
What you’re actually buying
A Nefertiti neck lift is a named injection map that targets the platysma, a sheet-like muscle that can create visible vertical bands and a downward pull along the jawline. The injector places small amounts of neuromodulator at multiple points under the jaw and on the upper neck so the muscle relaxes and the contour reads cleaner at rest.
It is an outpatient cosmetic procedure done in a clinician’s office, and Healthline notes that insurance will not pay for it because it is elective, and it also describes this use of botulinum toxin in the lower face and neck as off-label on its explainer page at elective cosmetic procedure.
Worked total example
Many clinics bill this pattern by unit, so a quote is easiest to audit when the office tells you the planned unit count and the per-unit price. Ask for the unit count. Ask what areas are included.
The FDA prescribing information for Botox Cosmetic describes jawline injections for platysma bands as 2 units into 4 sites on each side below the jawline (that is 8 sites total), which is 16 units for the jawline portion, per the prescribing information PDF.
That same label describes neck-band dosing as 1 unit into 5 sites along each vertical band, and a 31-unit total corresponds to one side with one band and the other side with two bands. The math is 3 bands times 5 sites equals 15 sites, so 15 units for bands plus 16 units at the jawline equals 31 units (label inputs are in that same prescribing PDF). If a clinic charges $10 to $25 per unit in the U.S., the toxin portion of that 31-unit plan is $310 to $775, based on the per-unit pricing guide.
How clinics price a Nefertiti neck lift
Pricing models usually fall into two buckets. Unit billing is the most transparent because you can reconcile the invoice against the dosing plan, and it is the only model that lets you compare a jawline-only plan against a jawline-plus-bands plan without guessing. Area billing can still be fair, but the clinic is bundling uncertainty, injector time, the risk of needing a few extra units for symmetry, and sometimes a built-in follow-up check. In that setup, two offices can quote the same total and still deliver different unit counts and different injection maps, because the bundle is not standardized across practices.
There is also a clinic-level pricing floor that has nothing to do with your anatomy. Scheduling, overhead, and the credentials of the person injecting are part of what you are buying, and many offices will not separate those pieces on a menu. Prices vary by metro.
When you want a neutral benchmark for injections outside of Nefertiti-specific marketing, ASPS lists an average botulinum toxin injection cost of $435 and notes that totals vary with product amount and geographic location, per ASPS cost context.
| Budget line | What it represents | Reference point |
|---|---|---|
| Visit quote | All-in clinic price for one Nefertiti session | $500 to $2,000 cited earlier in the intro |
| Unit plan | How much product is used across jawline points and neck bands | 20 to 50 units cited earlier in the intro |
| Injector benchmark | Broad botulinum toxin averages used for context | $435 cited earlier from ASPS |
What the quote includes
A clean quote separates the dosing plan from the visit rules. The dosing plan is how many units are intended for jawline points and how many are intended for neck bands, plus whether any adjacent areas are being treated in the same appointment. The visit rules are the things that turn one quote into two bills, consult charges, deposits that do or do not convert to credit, a defined window for a touch-up, and whether the follow-up check is part of the session price.
Some clinics build a touch-up policy into the first visit. Others treat any adjustment as a new paid session, even when the unit count is small. Ask how the office documents your dosing plan on the day of treatment and whether a follow-up check is included or billed as a separate appointment.
Payment tools can change timing. A CareCredit review describes Botox Cosmetic costs that can be billed per unit and discusses financing options for cosmetic care, per its Botox financing overview.
Hidden-costs
The most common hidden cost is paying twice in a short window. If you add another area after you like the first result, or if you treat bands and then decide the jawline also needs work, that second decision can add another visit inside the same season. With per-visit quotes cited at $500 to $2,000, repeating a session is not a rounding error. It is the budget.
The other hidden cost is what happens when product sourcing is questionable. A CDC health alert tied adverse events to counterfeit or mishandled botulinum toxin and noted that injections were sometimes given in nonclinical settings, per the April 2024 health advisory.
The FDA also warned that counterfeit Botox had been found in multiple states, which matters because follow-up evaluation can turn into a second bill if symptoms need assessment, per the May 2024 FDA alert.
What we verified
- Checked the FDA approval announcement for platysma bands in an Oct 2024 approval news.
- Confirmed longevity language on the RealSelf non-surgical neck lift page.
- Cross-referenced technique and safety context in the AAFP injection overview.
- Verified ongoing investigation updates in the CDC Dec 2024 update.
Mini-cases
Case A: You want a lighter touch along the jawline, with minimal work on the neck bands. In a unit-based clinic, this is where the bill can stay closer to the lower end because the injector is not committing to a full pattern. The practical risk is under-treating the downward pull that started the concern, which can prompt a second paid visit when the result looks uneven in motion or in photos.
Case B: You have visible bands and also want the jawline border treated in the same appointment. This is where quotes climb because the session includes both the jawline points and the vertical bands, plus the time needed to map symmetry and avoid an over-weak result in the lower face. Many patients also book a follow-up check, which can be included or billed, depending on the office.
Case C: You are price-shopping and choose a setting where safety practices are not clear. If you later need a medical evaluation for unexpected symptoms, the cheap quote stops looking cheap. A SELF report flags why “med spa Botox” can carry extra risk when training, oversight, and product sourcing are unclear, per its med spa risk explainer.
These cases have different drivers. Case A is dosing scope. Case B is combined areas. Case C is venue and safety, which can add costs that never appear on a menu.
Nefertiti lift vs surgical neck lift
A Nefertiti lift is a muscle-relaxation approach. A surgical neck lift is tissue work, tightening and reshaping under the skin, which is why pricing sits in a different tier. ASPS published 2024 surgeon-fee ranges for a neck lift at $7,500 to $13,000, per the 2024 surgeon-fee ranges.
Patient-reported totals can extend beyond surgeon fees once facility and anesthesia are added. RealSelf lists an average of $12,849 with an all-in range from $4,500 to $30,000, updated July 31, 2024, per its July 2024 cost update. If your main issue is under-chin fat rather than platysma activity, readers comparing paths often also look at laser double chin removal and the pricing of face liposuction cost, and some compare it with a broader lower-face plan like a Vertical Restore facelift when laxity is the dominant issue.
Who this cost makes sense for
The Nefertiti lift is a fit when the goal is a subtle change around neck bands and the jawline edge, and when you are comfortable treating it as maintenance. The common budgeting mistake is treating it like a one-and-done purchase. It is closer to a recurring service, and the real decision is whether you want a reversible, lower-downtime change, or whether you would rather save toward a longer-lasting surgical correction.
Makes sense if
- You have mild banding driven by muscle pull, not heavy loose skin.
- You want a reversible result with short downtime.
- You can return for maintenance if the effect fades fast.
- Your provider will put the dosing plan and follow-up rules in writing.
Doesn’t make sense if
- You want a large skin-tightening change from one appointment.
- Your main concern is under-chin fat, not platysma activity.
- You cannot return for a follow-up check if one is offered.
- You are relying on nonclinical settings to cut the bill.
Two short questions keep quotes comparable. Is the clinic billing per unit or per area. Will a touch-up be billed as a new visit.
Article Highlights
- The Nefertiti lift is a per-visit, self-pay injection pattern, and published quotes have been cited at $500 to $2,000.
- Unit counts and clinic billing style can shift totals even when the goal is the same.
- Repeat sessions and add-on areas are the most common reasons budgets creep.
- Safety shortcuts can create extra costs that are not listed on a menu.
- Surgical neck lift pricing sits in a different tier, and published surgeon-fee ranges start in the thousands.
Answers to Common Questions
Is a Nefertiti neck lift covered by insurance?
For cosmetic use, it is usually self-pay. Coverage is more common when botulinum toxin is prescribed for a medical diagnosis rather than appearance.
How many units are used for a Nefertiti lift?
Published references often cite dosing in the 20 to 50 unit range, and the plan can change with banding and whether the jawline is included.
How is it billed?
Many clinics bill by unit and list a per-unit rate. Some clinics bill a flat fee for the area, which can make the invoice less sensitive to a small unit adjustment.
What is the biggest cost risk?
Paying for extra visits close together and adding other areas after the first result are common ways the real total rises.
Disclosure: Educational content, not medical advice. Pricing varies by provider, location, and insurance. Confirm eligibility, coverage, and out-of-pocket costs with a licensed clinician and your insurer. See our methodology and corrections policy.
