Dermal Filler Volume Planner
Estimate HA filler volume (ml) by facial area — lips, cheeks, chin, jawline, tear troughs, nasolabial folds, temples. Consultation and treatment-planning reference for aesthetic providers worldwide.
Dermal Filler Volume Planner
Estimate HA filler ml by facial area for consultation planning
Clinical reference only. Actual filler choice, technique, and volume are at the treating injector’s discretion — based on anatomy, tissue quality, prior treatment, and treatment goals. Not a substitute for in-person consultation. Vascular anatomy makes some areas high-risk (tear troughs, nose) — only advanced injectors should treat these.
Estimated total
0.0 ml
Total filler volume
0 syringes
Assuming 1 ml syringes
Full correction is often staged across two sessions 2–4 weeks apart. Some patients need less; some need more.
How injectors use this tool
- Consultation planning — quickly estimate total ml and syringe count before quoting
- Patient-facing consultation aid — show ml estimates alongside recommended products
- Treatment page content — accurate volume ranges to include on filler pages (helps SEO, sets expectations)
- Stock forecasting — estimate monthly product mix based on typical treatment volumes
Full-face volume replacement — practical guidance
A common mistake in filler planning is treating in isolation. A patient with significant mid-face volume loss will benefit more from cheek + tear-trough support than from lip filler in isolation. Assess the whole face, propose a staged plan, and set the expectation that full correction usually takes two sessions 2–4 weeks apart.
High-risk areas — advanced injectors only
- Tear troughs — vascular anatomy and thin skin make this the highest-risk facial area for filler
- Nose (non-surgical rhinoplasty) — risk of vascular occlusion and skin necrosis; angular and dorsal arteries are unforgiving
- Glabella — historically the most reported site for filler-related blindness
FAQ
How is filler volume actually estimated?+
The ranges reflect manufacturer guidance and published injector consensus for HA fillers (Juvéderm, Restylane, Belotero, Teoxane). Actual volume depends on the patient's baseline anatomy, tissue quality, prior treatment, and treatment goals — full correction is often staged across two sessions.
Which filler product should I use for each area?+
The recommended products in each row reflect widely-used pairings — Voluma / Lyft for deep structural work (cheeks, chin, jawline), Vollure / Defyne for mid-face folds, Volbella / Kysse for lips, Belotero for fine lines and tear troughs. Always match the product's rheology to the tissue depth and mobility.
Is this tool safe for patients to use?+
It's designed as a consultation-planning reference for providers. Patients can use it to have an informed conversation, but the actual assessment must happen in person with a qualified injector — vascular anatomy makes tear troughs, nose, and glabella high-risk areas that only advanced injectors should treat.
Why does my quote seem higher/lower than the tool?+
Provider pricing varies significantly by location, injector experience, and product tier (Volux / Voluma cost more than standard HA). Volumes may also be higher if you're correcting substantial volume loss or lower if you're maintaining prior treatment.
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