How to reverse post-weight loss facial laxity: The best treatments for ‘Ozempic Face’
9 April 2026
By Dr Sophie Shotter
Best Treatments for Skin Laxity, Marylebone, London
Post-weight loss facial changes have become a big talking point, often labelled online as “Ozempic Face”. Rapid weight loss can reduce facial fat pads that used to support the skin, and when that happens you can see more laxity, deeper folds, a softer jawline, and a hollower look around the cheeks and temples. While social media has labelled this “Ozempic Face”, it isn’t unique to any one medication. It can happen after weight loss from any cause, including GLP-1 weight-loss injections, dieting, or bariatric surgery. The faster the change and the more weight you lose, the more likely it is that your face shows it.
The reassuring part is that there are genuinely effective, non-surgical options to improve post-weight loss facial laxity. The best results usually come from combining treatments that replace lost support, tighten the skin, and improve the skin’s underlying quality over time.
What ‘Ozempic Face’ actually is
Despite the nickname, this isn’t a special new condition. It’s a predictable effect of losing volume in the face. The mid-face can flatten, the under-eye area can look more tired, and the lower face can start to slide a little, making jowls or marionette lines more noticeable. Skin elasticity also plays a role. Younger skin often bounces back more easily, while more mature skin may need extra help, especially if the weight loss is quick.
It’s important to get the diagnosis right, because not every “tired” face after weight loss is only about laxity. Sometimes the dominant issue is volume loss. Sometimes it’s skin looseness. Often, it’s both.
Why skincare alone rarely fixes post-weight loss laxity
Good skincare matters, particularly for barrier health and hydration, but it can’t replace structural support that’s been lost. Creams don’t rebuild facial fat pads, and while active ingredients can improve texture and brightness, they won’t deliver a meaningful lift if the underlying scaffolding has changed.
That’s why the most effective treatments for post-weight loss facial laxity tend to be in-clinic, and they’re chosen based on whether you need support, tightening, or regeneration.
Dermal fillers for restoring facial support
Dermal fillers are often the quickest way to reverse the “hollow” look that can follow rapid weight loss. Hyaluronic acid fillers can replace volume in areas like the cheeks, temples, and sometimes the chin and jawline, depending on what’s changed. When they’re placed thoughtfully, they don’t just plump. They can restore the shape that holds the skin up, which can soften folds and improve the overall balance of the face.
This matters because a lot of people try to treat the lower face first, focusing on jowls or lines around the mouth. In many cases, the lower face looks worse because the mid-face has lost support. Rebuilding that support higher up can create a more natural-looking improvement, without heaviness.
Fillers aren’t a skin-tightening treatment, and they won’t be the best answer for everyone. If someone’s face feels loose rather than hollow, or if the main issue is crepey skin quality, it may be smarter to focus on collagen stimulation and tightening first, then add filler only where it truly helps.
Sofwave for non-surgical tightening after weight loss
Sofwave is a non-invasive ultrasound treatment used to improve skin laxity by stimulating collagen. It works by delivering focused ultrasound energy at a controlled depth, aiming to trigger a tightening and firming response over time without damaging the skin’s surface. That’s why it’s often chosen by people who want a lift but can’t face downtime, or who want to avoid more invasive procedures.
For post-weight loss facial laxity, Sofwave can be particularly useful when the issue is slackness along the jawline, softening through the cheeks, or an overall “looser” feel to the skin. It won’t recreate lost volume, so it’s not a replacement for filler, but it can help the skin sit more neatly and look more supported. Results tend to build gradually because collagen remodelling takes time.
Biostimulators for rebuilding skin quality from within
Biostimulators are often the unsung heroes for “Ozempic Face” because they’re aimed at long-term skin quality improvement rather than instant volume alone. They work by encouraging your body to produce more collagen, which can improve firmness, elasticity, and overall skin resilience. In the context of weight loss, that collagen support can make the skin look less thin and less lax, and it can help the face look healthier rather than simply fuller.
It’s important to keep expectations realistic. Biostimulators aren’t an overnight fix, and they don’t behave like traditional filler. They’re usually about gradual, natural improvement over weeks and months.
HArmonyCa and structural support over time
HArmonyCa is often described as a hybrid injectable because it combines hyaluronic acid for immediate support with calcium hydroxyapatite, which is associated with longer-term collagen stimulation. In practical terms, it can offer an instant improvement in contour with a gradual firming effect as the skin responds.
In post-weight loss faces, this can be useful when you want both a visible improvement and a longer-term boost in firmness, particularly in areas where the skin has started to look a bit slack.
Julaine for collagen stimulation
Julaine is commonly positioned as a collagen-stimulating injectable based on PLLA technology, used to support gradual improvements in firmness and skin quality rather than just adding immediate volume. This sort of approach can work well in weight-loss-related facial ageing, where the skin needs rebuilding and strengthening, not simply filling.
Lenisna for gradual regeneration with support
Lenisna is described as a hybrid biostimulator that combines PDLLA with hyaluronic acid, aiming to provide some immediate support alongside longer-term collagen stimulation. For people who have lost facial volume and also notice their skin looks thinner or less elastic, this can be a helpful middle ground, particularly when the goal is natural-looking restoration.
What treatment is best for ‘Ozempic Face’?
The most effective approach depends on what you’ve lost. If you mainly look hollow, dermal fillers are often the fastest and most effective way to restore facial shape and soften lines caused by volume loss. If you mainly look loose, Sofwave can be a strong option to tighten and firm without surgery, especially along the jawline and lower face. If your skin looks thinner, crepey, or generally less resilient, biostimulators such as HArmonyCa, Julaine, and Lenisna can help rebuild collagen support over time.
In many cases, the best plan uses more than one of these. A common mistake is trying to treat laxity with lots of filler. Too much filler in the wrong place can make the face look heavy without truly lifting it. Pairing subtle support with tightening and collagen stimulation is usually what gives the most natural, “you but fresher” result.
Timing matters after weight loss
If your weight is still changing rapidly, it’s often sensible to volumise in gradual steps along your journey. Skin tightening and collagen stimulation are best started while weight is being lost in many cases, and subtle support can be added strategically if the facial changes are affecting your confidence.
If you’re dealing with “Ozempic Face”, a personalised approach using dermal fillers for support, Sofwave for tightening, and biostimulators like HArmonyCa, Julaine, and Lenisna for collagen rebuilding is often the most effective way to get there. If you’d like to understand what’s right for you, click here to enquire or to book a consultation.