What changing your face actually costs (genioplasty, fillers, rhinoplasty)
Hey Reader,
Before you spend $14k changing your face, spend $14.99 knowing what to actually fix.
Most people who scan, walk away, and don't see results in 30 days eventually consider cosmetic procedures. These are the realistic price ranges from published procedure-cost surveys (American Society of Plastic Surgeons, 2024). Numbers vary by region.
Genioplasty (chin advancement)
$5,000-$15,000 + 4-6 months recovery. Permanent. Reversal involves a second surgery.
Jawline filler (hyaluronic acid)
$800-$2,000 per session. Dissolves in 9-18 months. Ongoing cost in perpetuity.
Rhinoplasty
$5,000-$15,000 + 6-12 months for full structural settle. Permanent. Outcome variance is real.
Here's the part nobody tells you: most of the people who book these procedures haven't measured what's actually weakest about their face. They went off mirror feel + one bad photo + a consult with someone who sells the procedure.
A measured 17-metric scan with percentile rankings does three things a consult can't:
- Tells you whether your weakest metric is actually structural (procedure may help) or photo/posture/skin (procedure won't move it).
- Ranks the 17 metrics so you fix the highest-ROI one first.
- Gives you a baseline you can rescan against in 30 days, so you know whether a free fix already moved the needle before you spend $14k.
$14.99 vs $14,000 isn't the right comparison.
$14.99 is the cost of finding out whether the $14,000 would even target the right problem. We have customers whose weakest metric turned out to be lighting + skin clarity. a $25 lamp and a skincare routine, not a chin implant.
17 metrics · percentile rankings · 30-day protocol · 7-day refund