Section 01 — Surgical Procedures

Top Cosmetic Surgical Procedures, US 2024

The American Society of Plastic Surgeons reported a 1% year-over-year increase in cosmetic surgical procedures in 2024, with total procedures remaining stable despite economic headwinds. Liposuction maintained its position as the most frequently performed surgical procedure for the third consecutive year.

Liposuction

349,728

procedures performed in 2024

↑ 1% vs 2023

Breast Augmentation

~304K

procedures performed in 2024

↑ 1% vs 2023

Tummy Tuck

~148K

procedures performed in 2024

↑ 1% vs 2023

Blepharoplasty

#1

most common facial surgery in US 2024

Stable

Rhinoplasty

~1M

procedures globally (ISAPS 2024)

↓ 10% globally

BBL

50%

of buttock augmentation volume in South region

Dominant

Sources: 2024 ASPS Procedural Statistics Report (released June 2025); Statista ASPS 2024 data (liposuction women: 328,646; all liposuction: 349,728); ISAPS 2024 Global Survey (released June 2025).

28.5M+

Total minimally invasive cosmetic procedures performed in the United States in 2024 — dwarfing the approximately 1.5 million surgical procedures by a factor of nearly 19 to 1. The recovery burden across these procedures is enormous and almost entirely unsupported by independent information resources.

Source: 2024 ASPS Procedural Statistics Report

Section 02 — Minimally Invasive

Injectables and Non-Surgical Procedures, 2024

Minimally invasive treatments grew 3% in 2024, outpacing the 1% growth in surgical procedures. Injectables continue to dominate due to their short recovery times and lower cost relative to surgical alternatives.

Procedure 2024 Volume (US) YoY Change Type
Neuromodulators (Botox, Dysport, etc.) 9,883,711 ↑ 4% Injectable
HA Dermal Fillers 5,331,426 ↑ 1% Injectable
Skin Resurfacing (laser, chemical peel, microdermabrasion) 3,703,305 ↑ 6% Energy / Topical
Skin Treatments (laser hair removal, IPL, tattoo removal) 3,112,056 Energy
Lip Augmentation (injectable) 1,449,565 ↑ 1% Injectable
Non-HA Fillers (Sculptra, Radiesse) 932,861 ↑ 1% Injectable

Source: 2024 ASPS Procedural Statistics Report, released June 25, 2025. Skin resurfacing saw the largest growth in the minimally invasive category at 6% year-over-year.

Botox dominance

9.9M treatments

Neuromodulator injections remain the single most performed cosmetic procedure in the US — surgical or non-surgical — by a significant margin.

Filler total

~7M treatments

Combining HA fillers and lip augmentation gives approximately 6.8 million filler procedures in 2024 — each requiring specific aftercare guidance.

Skin resurfacing

↑ 6% YoY

Laser and chemical peel procedures were the fastest-growing minimally invasive category in 2024, with 3.7 million procedures performed.

Section 03 — Recovery Data

Recovery Timelines by Procedure

Recovery timelines represent the published clinical consensus across peer-reviewed literature and established aftercare protocols. "Return to desk work" and "final result" markers are the most practically useful data points for patients planning their recovery.

Procedure Return to Desk Work Most Swelling Resolved Final Result Type
Botox / Neuromodulators Same day 2-5 days 10-14 days Injectable
HA Lip Filler Same day 5-7 days 14 days Injectable
Cheek / Jawline Filler Same day 7-14 days 3-4 weeks Injectable
Microneedling (standard) 2-5 days 5-7 days 4-6 weeks (collagen) Energy
Superficial Chemical Peel 2-3 days 3-5 days 1-2 weeks Topical
Medium TCA Chemical Peel 7-10 days 7-14 days 3-4 weeks Topical
Liposuction 7-10 days 6-8 weeks 3-6 months Surgical
Tummy Tuck (Abdominoplasty) 10-14 days 6-8 weeks 4-6 months Surgical
BBL (Brazilian Butt Lift) 10-14 days 6-8 weeks 6 months Surgical
Blepharoplasty (Eyelid Surgery) 10-14 days 2-3 weeks 3-6 months Surgical
Rhinoplasty 10-14 days 3 months (80%) 12-18 months Surgical
Buccal Fat Removal 3-5 days 3-4 weeks 3-6 months Surgical

Sources: ASPS patient recovery guidance; published clinical aftercare protocols consistent across board-certified plastic surgery practices. Individual recovery experiences vary based on surgical technique, patient health, and adherence to aftercare protocols.

12–18 months

The full rhinoplasty result timeline — the single most under-communicated fact in surgical cosmetic recovery. 80% of swelling resolves in 3 months. The final 20%, including nasal tip refinement, takes up to 18 months. Patients who are not told this before surgery consistently report the most post-operative distress.

Source: published clinical consensus across board-certified rhinoplasty aftercare protocols.

Section 04 — Compression Requirements

Compression Garment Requirements by Procedure

Compression garments are a mandatory recovery tool across all body contouring surgical procedures. The duration, type, and staging requirements vary significantly by procedure. Non-compliance with compression protocols is one of the most common causes of suboptimal outcomes after liposuction, BBL, and tummy tuck.

Procedure Garment Type Required Duration Wear Schedule Key Requirement
Liposuction / Lipo 360 Stage 1 then Stage 2 faja 6+ weeks 23/7 for weeks 1-6 Switch to Stage 2 by fit, not calendar
BBL Open-seat BBL faja (Stage 1 + Stage 2) 6-8 weeks 23/7 for weeks 1-6 Open-seat design mandatory — no buttock compression
Tummy Tuck Abdominal binder / post-surgical faja 6 weeks 24/7 including sleep Drain-compatible design may be needed
Blepharoplasty None (compression garment) N/A Cold compresses only Head elevation and cold therapy replace compression
Rhinoplasty External splint (surgeon-applied) 5-7 days Continuous until removal No glasses on bridge for 4-6 weeks after splint removal
Botox / Filler None N/A N/A No pressure or massage on treated area for 24 hours

Sources: ASPS compression guidance; post-surgical garment protocols consistent across board-certified plastic surgery practice instructions.

Minimum Stage 1 fajas

2 garments

The clinical requirement for 23/7 compression means one garment is always washing while the other is worn. Two Stage 1 fajas is the practical minimum for compliance — a fact almost never communicated at consultation.

BBL open-seat requirement

100%

Every BBL patient requires a compression garment with a full open-seat or open-back design. A standard lipo garment compresses the transferred fat grafts and can directly compromise outcomes. This distinction is non-negotiable.

Section 05 — Cost Benchmarks

Typical Recovery Product Cost Ranges, US 2026

Recovery product costs are rarely disclosed before surgery and are not included in procedure quotes. These benchmarks represent typical US retail pricing across commonly required recovery products for each procedure category. Actual costs vary by brand, retailer, and the number of items purchased.

Procedure Essential Products Typical Low Range Typical High Range Largest Variable Cost
Liposuction / Lipo 360 Fajas (×2-4), foam, board, supplements $260 $620 Professional lymphatic massage ($480–$1,440)
BBL BBL fajas (×2), BBL pillow, body pillow, foam $230 $635 Professional lymphatic massage ($480–$1,200)
Tummy Tuck Faja (×2), foam, board, drain supplies, scar sheets $190 $560 Professional lymphatic massage ($480–$1,200)
Rhinoplasty Wedge pillow, saline spray, cold mask, arnica $85 $280 Contact lenses for 6-week glasses restriction ($30–$150)
Blepharoplasty Eye drops, ointment, cold mask, wedge pillow, sunglasses $75 $220 Preservative-free eye drops for 4-6 weeks ($48–$135)
Lip Filler Arnica, lip balm, ice pack $23 $75 Arnica supplements started pre-appointment ($10–$35)
Botox Arnica (optional), fragrance-free moisturiser $10 $65 Optional — arnica reduces bruising risk pre-treatment
Microneedling Mineral SPF, HA serum, gentle cleanser, copper peptides $48 $195 Copper peptide serum for series ($20–$90)
Medium TCA Peel Mineral SPF (multiple), rich moisturiser, cica cream $33 $140 SPF ongoing post-treatment (months of consistent use)

Methodology: Cost ranges reflect typical US retail prices for commonly recommended recovery products as of 2026. Ranges represent the midpoint of low-end to high-end product selections. Professional service costs (lymphatic massage) are not included in the essential product ranges above but are noted separately as the largest variable. Prices sourced from major US retailers. Individual costs will vary.

$1,200–$2,640

The realistic total recovery spend for a liposuction patient who follows clinical aftercare recommendations fully — including two stages of compression garments, foam and boards, and a full course of professional lymphatic massage. This cost is almost never disclosed before surgery and is not included in any procedure quote.

Based on Cosmetic Aftercare recovery product cost analysis, 2026

Go Deeper: The Rankings

This data page is the foundation for three editorial rankings that turn the numbers into decisions:

Recovery Ranked: every major cosmetic procedure ranked by how hard the recovery actually is.

Pain Ranked: procedures ranked by real reported pain, not brochure language.

Cost Ranked: the full cost picture including the recovery spend nobody quotes.

Most Popular Procedures Ranked: which procedures people are actually getting in 2026, separated from what is just trending.

About This Data

This reference page compiles publicly available procedural statistics from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) 2024 Procedural Statistics Report, released June 25, 2025, and the International Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery (ISAPS) 2024 Global Survey, released June 2025. Both reports are based on surveys of board-certified plastic surgeons and represent the most comprehensive annual data available on cosmetic procedure volumes.

Recovery timeline data is compiled from published clinical aftercare protocols, peer-reviewed literature, and the recovery research conducted for Cosmetic Aftercare's editorial guide library. Recovery timelines represent published clinical consensus ranges and should be understood as representative estimates — individual experiences vary based on surgical technique, patient health status, volume of treatment, and adherence to post-operative instructions.

Recovery cost benchmarks are based on 2026 US retail pricing research and represent typical costs for commonly recommended products. They do not include surgeon fees, facility fees, anaesthesia, medications, or professional service costs beyond those noted. Actual costs vary by region, brand choice, and individual clinical requirements.

This page is updated annually as new ASPS and ISAPS data is released. Cosmetic Aftercare is an independent editorial site with no clinic affiliations and no sponsored content. This page contains no affiliate links. Elsewhere on the site, some product recommendations earn affiliate commissions, disclosed on the page where they appear. No manufacturer or provider has any input into the data or editorial content on this site. Read our full editorial standards.

Last updated: June 2026. Primary data year: 2024. Next update: Upon release of 2025 ASPS statistics (expected mid-2026).

Find the recovery guide for your procedure

Every procedure in this data set has a dedicated recovery guide on Cosmetic Aftercare — written honestly, without clinic affiliation or commercial bias.

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