What Does a Full-Face Treatment Plan Actually Cost in Tysons?

The question comes up in nearly every consultation: What would it cost to address everything at once? It is a reasonable question, and it deserves a thoughtful answer — not a vague range designed to get you in the door, and not a number so artificially low that it bears no resemblance to what a genuinely comprehensive plan requires.

This page is for the person who has done their research. Who understands that full-face rejuvenation is not a single treatment. Who wants to understand, honestly and in detail, what a well-designed plan looks like, what drives its cost, and how to think about it as an investment rather than a line item.

What Is Full-Face Rejuvenation?

Full-face rejuvenation is not a product. It is a clinical framework — a coordinated approach to addressing multiple signs of aging across the entire face using a combination of treatments that work together, not in isolation. The goal is not to look like you had work done. It is to look like yourself, restored.

Done well, full-face rejuvenation addresses the four primary dimensions of facial aging simultaneously:

  • Volume loss — the deflation that occurs in the cheeks, temples, and under-eye area as fat pads shift and bone resorbs with age
  • Dynamic movement — the repetitive muscle contractions that etch lines into the forehead, between the brows, and around the eyes
  • Skin quality — the texture, tone, and surface-level changes that accumulate from sun exposure, time, and environmental damage
  • Structural definition — the softening of the jawline, jowling, and loss of lower-face contour that characterizes aging in the third and fourth decade

A plan that addresses only one or two of these dimensions will always feel incomplete. A plan that addresses all four, sequenced thoughtfully and tailored to your anatomy, produces results that are cohesive, natural, and lasting.

The Components of a Full-Face Plan — and What Each One Costs

Rather than presenting a single number, it is more useful to walk through the categories of treatment that typically comprise a full-face plan and give you honest cost context for each. At Tysons Elite Esthetics, pricing reflects the clinical expertise of our team, the quality of products we use, and the precision of execution — not volume discounts or aggressive promotional structures.

Neuromodulators — Managing Dynamic Movement

Neuromodulators like Daxxify and Xeomin are the foundation of most full-face plans for clients over 35. They address the forehead, glabella, crow's feet, and — when appropriate — the masseter, platysmal bands, brow position, and perioral area.

A comprehensive neuromodulator treatment addressing multiple zones typically ranges from $600 to $1,400 per session, depending on the product selected, the number of units required, and the number of treatment zones. Clients who choose Daxxify for its extended duration — often four to six months versus the standard three — may pay a modest premium but find the annual cost comparable or lower over time.

If you are comparing neuromodulator options, our blog on Xeomin vs. Botox vs. Dysport vs. Daxxify offers detailed clinical context for each.

Dermal Fillers — Restoring Volume and Structure

This is typically the largest single investment within a full-face plan, and also the category where the difference between a thoughtful provider and a volume-focused one is most visible.

A comprehensive filler plan might address the temples, cheeks, tear troughs, nasolabial folds, lips, marionette lines, chin, and jawline — though not necessarily all in a single session. Volume restoration is cumulative and strategic. Placing too much product at once is as problematic as placing too little.

Filler is priced per syringe. At this level of practice, product selection matters: we work with premium formulations including Revanesse Versa and Revance RHA, chosen for their performance characteristics in different anatomical zones.

A single syringe typically ranges from $700 to $950 depending on product and placement. A full-face filler plan commonly involves two to five syringes distributed across multiple zones. For the client addressing significant volume loss, a realistic first-year filler investment across the entire face may range from $1,400 to $4,500, with maintenance requirements diminishing in subsequent years as the foundation is established.

For context on how different zones are approached, see our posts on midface volume restoration, temple filler, and tear trough treatment.

Skin Quality and Surface Treatments

No amount of filler or neuromodulator will address skin texture, pigmentation, laxity, or surface aging. These concerns require energy-based or chemical interventions — and they are often where clients see the most dramatic visible improvement in overall appearance.

The appropriate treatment depends on your skin's specific concerns and your tolerance for downtime:

  • Pixel8-RF Radiofrequency Microneedling — a gold standard for skin laxity, texture, and pore refinement with minimal downtime. A series of three sessions typically ranges from $1,800 to $3,000.
  • CO2 Laser Resurfacing — for clients with more significant sun damage, fine lines, or texture concerns who are willing to accept a meaningful recovery period. A single full-face treatment may range from $1,500 to $2,500 depending on the depth and area of coverage. The results are correspondingly more transformative.
  • IPL Photofacial — ideal for diffuse pigmentation, redness, and early sun damage. A series of three to five sessions typically ranges from $900 to $1,800.
  • Vi Peel Precision Plus — a medical-grade chemical peel well suited to clients managing melasma, fine lines, or uneven tone, priced per session and often used in combination with other treatments.

For clients choosing between energy-based options, our post on RF microneedling vs. laser resurfacing offers a direct clinical comparison.

Biostimulators — Long-Term Structural Support

For clients over 45, or those who are moving away from filler-heavy approaches, biostimulators like Sculptra and Radiesse offer a fundamentally different mechanism: rather than adding immediate volume, they stimulate your own collagen production over time, producing gradual, durable improvements in skin quality and structural support.

Biostimulators are priced per vial or per session and typically require two to three treatments spaced weeks apart. A complete protocol may range from $1,500 to $3,500, with results that can persist for two years or more.

What Does a Full-Face Plan Actually Cost — In Total?

There is no universal number, and any practice that quotes you one without a consultation is not designing a plan — it is selling a package. That said, it is reasonable to provide honest ranges for planning purposes.

For a client in their late 30s or 40s presenting with moderate concerns — early volume loss, dynamic lines, some texture and pigmentation — a comprehensive first-year full-face plan at Tysons Elite Esthetics might reasonably fall in the range of $4,000 to $9,000, distributed across multiple sessions and treatment categories.

For a client in their 50s or beyond with more significant volume loss, structural softening, and surface damage, a thorough first-year plan addressing all dimensions may range from $7,000 to $15,000 or more, particularly when CO2 laser resurfacing and a more comprehensive filler protocol are included.

These figures are not meant to be alarming. They are meant to be honest. The clients we serve are not looking for the least expensive option available in Northern Virginia. They are looking for the most precise, most appropriate, and most expertly executed option — and they understand that those things have a corresponding value.

It is also worth noting that most full-face plans are not executed in a single appointment. They are typically staged over several months, which distributes the investment and allows the clinical team to assess how your tissue responds before adding additional product or treatments.

What Drives the Cost — and Why It Varies

Several factors determine where your plan falls within these ranges:

  • Your anatomy and the degree of change you are seeking. A client looking for subtle maintenance requires a different plan than one addressing years of deferred treatment or significant structural aging.
  • The products and technologies selected. Premium neuromodulators, advanced filler formulations, and medical-grade laser platforms represent a higher investment than their lower-grade counterparts — and they produce measurably different results.
  • The clinical expertise executing the plan. At Tysons Elite Esthetics, every injectable treatment is performed under the medical oversight of Dr. Navin Singh, our triple board-certified medical director and Johns Hopkins-trained plastic surgeon. Our Medical Estheticians hold the highest licensure available in the Commonwealth of Virginia. That level of expertise is reflected in outcomes that are consistently anatomically precise and clinically sound.
  • The number and combination of treatment categories. A plan involving only neuromodulators and one or two syringes of filler is naturally a different investment than one that incorporates biostimulators, RF microneedling, and a full volumetric restoration protocol.

How We Build a Full-Face Plan at Tysons Elite Esthetics

Every plan begins with a consultation — not a sales conversation, but a clinical assessment. Luise Estelle, our founder, approaches each new client with the same framework: understand your face before recommending anything for it.

We look at bone structure, fat pad distribution, skin quality, musculature, and the relationship between zones. We listen to what bothers you most, what you have tried before, and what kind of result you are actually seeking — not what you think you should want, but what would genuinely improve your confidence and quality of life.

From there, we sequence. We do not recommend every treatment at once. We build a roadmap that is realistic for your timeline, your tolerance for downtime, and your investment capacity. Some clients execute the full plan within six months. Others prefer to stage it over a year or two. Both approaches work when the plan is well designed from the outset.

If you are curious about how combination approaches work in practice, our post on stacking RF microneedling, biostimulators, and neuromodulators offers useful context.

A Note on Value

The clients who come to us have usually been somewhere else first. They have tried the promotional med spa, the weekend special, the groupon facial. They know what those experiences feel like, and they know what the results look like — or do not look like.

What they are seeking when they find us is not necessarily a lower price. It is confidence that the person holding the syringe or operating the laser has the clinical judgment to make good decisions for their face. That the products being used are authentic and appropriate. That the results will be cohesive, not additive — designed, not accumulated.

That is the value proposition of a boutique concierge practice. It is not for everyone. But for the client who is ready for it, there is no substitute.

Serving Tysons Corner, McLean, Great Falls, Vienna, and the DC Metro Area

Tysons Elite Esthetics is located at 7777 Leesburg Pike in Falls Church, Virginia — steps from Tysons Galleria and easily accessible from the Greensboro Silver Line Metro station. We serve clients from across the Tysons-McLean corridor, including Great Falls, Vienna, Arlington, and the broader Northern Virginia and DC Metro area.

If you are ready to understand what a full-face plan would look like for your specific anatomy and goals, we welcome you to schedule a consultation. There is no obligation, and there is no pressure. Just a careful conversation about your face and what it deserves.

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