A Facelift Planned For a Man’s Face
Men now account for a growing share of facial rejuvenation surgery, and the men who come to Dr. Rafizadeh in Morristown tend to describe the same thing: a heavy lower face and a soft neck that no longer match how they feel or how they want to be read across a conference table. Video calls have made most of them acutely aware of their profile. What they are asking for is not a different face — it is the same face, sharper.
A facelift for men uses the same underlying operation as any facelift: the deeper layer of the face is released and repositioned, and the skin is simply laid back over it without tension. What changes is the planning. Beard-bearing skin, thicker and more vascular tissue, hairlines that hide less, and a masculine aesthetic target all have to be designed for from the first mark of the pen. Dr. Rafizadeh has performed facelift surgery in New Jersey since 1984 and plans male cases around those differences rather than applying one template to every face.
“A man’s facelift fails in the details. Put the incision where you would put it on a woman and you march his beard onto the tragus. Lift in the wrong vector and you soften the jaw you were hired to sharpen. Done properly, nobody sees an operation — they see a man who looks fit and rested, with the jawline he had at forty.”
— Dr. Farhad Rafizadeh, MD FACS
What’s Actually Different for Men
Three anatomic realities separate a male facelift from a female one. Each is a planning decision, not an afterthought.
Hair follicles extend in front of and behind the ear. In women the incision hides behind the tragus; in men that would advance beard skin onto the tragus, forcing you to shave inside your ear. The male incision runs anterior to the ear instead — trading a little camouflage for a natural sideburn and a clean shaving border.
Male skin is heavier and the beard’s blood supply is rich, so meticulous hemostasis matters and early bruising can be more pronounced. The deep plane technique suits this: it works in a defined anatomic plane and repositions deep tissue rather than relying on a wide skin flap under tension.
The goal is a defined mandibular border and a clean neck angle — not a softened, lifted, feminized midface. Vectors, the degree of lift, and any volume added are chosen to reinforce structure. Over-tightening is the single fastest way to make a man look operated on.
Hairline, Baldness, and Short Hair
Men wear their hair short, recede at the temples, or shave their heads entirely — which means there is far less hair to conceal an incision than the standard facelift diagram assumes. This is a well-described problem in the surgical literature, and the answer is design, not avoidance: incisions are planned along natural hairline and ear contours, the temporal hair tuft is preserved rather than displaced, and the sideburn is never pulled upward or backward into a new position. Bring photographs of how you actually wear your hair — and how you wore it ten years ago — to your consultation. It changes the plan.
Who Is a Good Candidate
The right candidate is a man in good general health, not smoking, with well-controlled blood pressure, who is bothered by jowling, a soft jawline, or neck laxity — and who wants to look like himself. Men often present later than women, in their late 50s and 60s, once the neck has changed substantially; coming earlier usually means a smaller operation.
It is equally important to know who this operation is not for. A man whose complaint is really the eyes may need eyelid surgery alone. A man bothered only by the neck may need a neck lift, not a facelift. A man with early, limited laxity may be better served by waiting. Uncontrolled hypertension, active smoking, and unrealistic expectations are all reasons Dr. Rafizadeh will decline to operate, and he says so at the consultation rather than after a deposit.
What to Expect
Consultation is unhurried and surgeon-led: your face is examined in motion, your health and medications reviewed, your hairline and beard pattern mapped, and the operation your anatomy actually calls for explained — including when that is a smaller operation than you came in asking for. Surgery is performed with careful anesthetic and blood-pressure management. Most men go home the same day with a light dressing, spend the first two days resting with the head elevated, and are seen in the Morristown office within the first week.
→ Schedule a ConsultationAn honest, surgeon-led assessment of your face, your hairline, and your health — with a plan built for a man’s anatomy. Call (973) 267-0928.Recovery & Shaving Timeline
Men ask two questions about recovery that women rarely do: when can I shave, and when will nobody be able to tell? Here is the honest sequence after a male facelift at our Morristown, New Jersey practice. Individual timelines vary and Dr. Rafizadeh gives you yours at each post-operative visit.
Head elevated, light dressing, cold compresses. Swelling peaks in this window and the face feels tight rather than painful for most men. No shaving anywhere near the incisions. Blood pressure is kept controlled — this is the period when meticulous hemostasis pays off, and when exertion is most costly.
Sutures come out at the Morristown office over the first week to ten days. Bruising is at its most visible and, in men, often a little more pronounced than expected because of the beard’s rich blood supply. Most men work from home. Shaving resumes away from the incision lines first, on Dr. Rafizadeh’s direction, with an electric razor before a blade.
Bruising resolves substantially and residual swelling becomes something only you notice. This is when most men return to the office and to video calls. The jawline and neck angle are visibly improved but not yet final. Vigorous exercise, heavy lifting, and anything that spikes blood pressure still wait.
Normal shaving over the whole beard is typically comfortable again, and skin sensation in front of and behind the ear continues returning — temporary numbness there is expected and resolves gradually. Exercise is reintroduced on a schedule. Incision lines are pink and firm; this is normal early scar maturation, not a scar problem.
Swelling has fully settled and the jawline and cervicomental angle look like themselves. Incisions fade toward the color of surrounding skin over the first year, and the sideburn and shaving border sit where they always did. This is the point at which colleagues say you look well and cannot say why — which is the entire objective.
Cost, Insurance & Planning
A facelift performed for appearance is a cosmetic procedure and is not covered by insurance. The cost of any individual case depends on the scope of the operation — whether the neck is addressed, whether eyelid surgery or fat grafting is performed at the same time — along with anesthesia and facility time. Combining procedures under one anesthetic is usually more efficient than staging them, both in cost and in total recovery. Financing is available, and the practice quotes an all-inclusive figure in writing after your consultation rather than a number over the phone, because a number given before your face has been examined is a guess.
Men considering a facelift are frequently comparing it against non-surgical options they have seen advertised. It is worth being blunt: energy devices and injectables do not remove skin or lift a descended deep layer. They have a role, and Dr. Rafizadeh offers them — but as a maintenance layer, not as a substitute for an operation the anatomy calls for. If you have been told a device will replace a facelift, get a second opinion.
Related Procedures
→ Deep Plane FaceliftThe technique behind most male cases in this practice — repositioning deep tissue instead of stretching skin, which is what keeps a jawline sharp rather than tight. → Neck Lift & PlatysmaplastyFor men whose complaint is genuinely the collar line and profile rather than the cheeks — sometimes the smaller, correct operation. → Eyelid Surgery for MenHeavy upper lids account for much of the “tired” impression men want corrected, and it is frequently combined with a facelift under one anesthetic. → Male Breast ReductionThe most common cosmetic operation men have in the United States — and, like the male facelift, one that depends entirely on planning for male anatomy.Sources & References
- Jacono AA, et al. “The Male Facelift.” PubMed
- “The male facelift: considerations and techniques.” PubMed
- “Face Lifting in Bald Male Patients: New Trends and Specific Needs.” PubMed
- StatPearls. “Deep Plane Facelift.” NCBI Bookshelf. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
- American Society of Plastic Surgeons. “Plastic Surgery Statistics Report.” plasticsurgery.org
- American Society of Plastic Surgeons. “Looking into the future: Plastic surgery trends for 2026.” plasticsurgery.org
- American Board of Plastic Surgery. Certification verification. abplasticsurgery.org
