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How to Get Rid of Neck Lines – Treatments That Actually Work


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Neck lines — the horizontal creases that run across the front of the neck — are one of the earliest visible signs of facial ageing, and one of the hardest to disguise. Unlike facial wrinkles, you can’t strategically style hair around them, and high-necked clothing draws attention rather than hiding it. The neck skin is thinner than facial skin, has fewer oil glands, and gets neglected by most skincare routines, so it tends to look older than the face by 5 to 10 years.


This guide covers what’s actually causing your neck lines, which non-surgical treatments work for which type, and when you should be thinking about instead of more injectables.



What causes neck lines?


There are three different mechanisms producing what most people lump together as "neck lines," and the treatment depends on which one you have.


Horizontal neck lines (necklace lines). These are static creases side-to-side across the front of the neck. They form gradually from a combination of skin thinning, collagen loss, repetitive movement (every time you look down at a phone or laptop), and sun damage. They’re often visible even in young people who spend a lot of time on devicessometimes called "tech neck."


Vertical neck bands (platysmal bands). These are vertical cords or bands that become visible when you talk, eat, or contract the muscle in the neck. With age, the platysma muscle’s medial edges separate and the muscle thins, allowing the bands to protrude. They’re often more than horizontal lines and can develop in surprisingly young patients with prominent neck musculature.


Crepey neck skin. Not a line so much as a texture — finely wrinkled, thin, papery skin across the neck and chest. Caused by collagen depletion, sun damage, and dehydration. Often coexists with horizontal lines.


Each of these responds to a different treatment. Mixing them up is the most common reason patients see disappointing resultsanti-wrinkle injections do nothing for crepey skin, and skin boosters do nothing for platysmal bands.


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Prevention — what actually works


The single most effective thing you can do for your neck is daily SPF on the neck and chest. Most people apply sunscreen religiously to the face and stop at the jawline. The neck then ages at double or triple the pace of the face. Use a separate SPF50 specifically for the neck and décolletage every morning, year-round, regardless of weather.


Beyond that, the evidence-based interventions are limited but worth doing: retinol or retinoid use on the neck (start gently — neck skin tolerates less well than face), crash dieting and weight cycling (loose skin from rapid weight loss is essentially permanent), and keeping the head in a neutral position rather than constantly tilted down toward devices.


Neck creams, "anti-ageing" pillows, and so-called toning devices have limited published evidence. They won’t cause harm but they also won’t reverse established lines.



Non-surgical treatments for horizontal neck lines


For static lines caused by skin thinning and dehydration, the treatments that actually move the needle are:


. A high-concentration hyaluronic acid skin booster injected at standardised points along the neck. It stimulates collagen and elastin and significantly improves skin quality, hydration, and the of fine lines. Best for early-to-moderate lines on otherwise reasonable-quality skin. Two sessions four weeks apart, then every 6 months. This is our go-to first-line treatment for neck lines in patients in their 30s and 40s.


. Other hyaluronic acid skin boosters can be used in a similar way to Profhilo. We typically to Profhilo because of its stronger evidence base for the neck specifically.


. A regenerative skin booster that works through different mechanisms to Profhilo, particularly useful when skin quality is poor or in older patients where collagen response is more sluggish. Can be combined with or substituted for Profhilo.


. Radiofrequency microneedling that tightens deeper skin layers. Helpful for moderate horizontal lines with early laxity. Usually 2 to 3 sessions, results building over 3 to 6 months. Best paired with Profhilo for a combined and remodelling effect.


. A laser-based skin tightening treatment also useful for the neck. Different mechanism to Morpheus8 — non-ablative laser energy rather than radiofrequency — and tends to suit patients with less laxity.



Treating platysmal bands


Vertical platysmal bands are a muscle problem, not a skin problem, which is why none of the treatments above will fix them. The treatment is anti-wrinkle injections placed along the visible bands, relaxing the platysma muscle so the bands stop protruding when you talk or contract the muscle.


This works well for early-to-moderate banding in patients with otherwise reasonable neck skin. It takes about 15 minutes, results visible at 7 to 14 days, lasting 3 to 4 months before re-treatment. Several dozen small injections are typically needed across both bands.


The technique is sometimes called the "Nefertiti lift" — relaxing the platysma also subtly lifts the jawline because the platysma normally pulls down on the lower face. Patients usually notice both effects.


For severe platysmal banding with visible muscle separation in a relaxed position, anti-wrinkle injections will only partially help. At that stage, surgical correction during a neck lift ( — re-approximating the muscle edges) becomes the appropriate option.


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Treating crepey neck skin


Crepey skin is the hardest of the three to treat because the underlying issue is widespread, advanced collagen loss across a large, thin tissue surface. No single treatment fixes it; layered approaches work best.


The combination that works most reliably:


For severe in a patient who has good underlying anatomy, the most effective option is usually , which removes redundant skin entirely rather than trying to remodel it.



When to consider neck lift surgery


Non-surgical work well for early changes. They don’t work for true skin redundancy, advanced laxity, or significant platysmal . The honest reality is that no injectable or energy device removes excess skin — they tighten and remodel what’s there.


You’re probably a candidate for surgical if:


A at Centre for Surgery removes excess skin, tightens the platysma muscle (platysmaplasty), and often includes to remove fat under the chin. Recovery is around 2 weeks of social downtime and 6 weeks before strenuous exercise. last 5 to 10 years and address the underlying rather than just the surface.


For patients with mid-stage neck ageing — too advanced for skin boosters but not ready for a full neck lift — a can be a useful middle option.


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Which Polynucleotide Treatment for which patient?


Late 20s to early 30s, early horizontal lines, no laxity: Profhilo as primary treatment, daily SPF and retinol as ongoing maintenance.


Mid-30s to mid-40s, moderate horizontal lines, some platysmal banding: Profhilo for skin quality, anti-wrinkle injections for bands. Add Morpheus8 if laxity is starting.


Late 40s to mid-50s, crepey skin, visible banding, early laxity: Combined treatment — Profhilo, anti-wrinkle injections, and Morpheus8 in layered sessions. Begin whether a neck lift will eventually be appropriate.


Mid-50s onwards with significant skin redundancy: Neck lift consultation. Non-surgical treatments at this stage are usually disappointing and not cost-effective compared to surgical correction that lasts a decade.



What we don’t recommend


We don’t perform thread lifts of the neck. The published evidence does not support them for lasting neck improvement, complications are higher than for facial threads, and we’ve seen too many patients arrive after disappointing or complicated thread procedures elsewhere.


We don’t recommend "miracle" neck creams, neck-toning gadgets, or chin straps. Save the money for treatments with actual mechanism of action.


We don’t more than two energy-based treatments at once on the neck — the skin is thin and combined heat-based treatments can cause prolonged inflammation or issues, particularly in darker skin types.



Why choose Centre for Surgery for neck rejuvenation?


We offer the full range of neck treatmentsnon-surgical injectables and skin boosters, energy-based devices, and surgical neck lift — under one roof on Baker Street. This matters because the right treatment is the one that matches your anatomy, not the one a single-modality clinic happens to sell.


All treatments are performed by GMC-registered doctors. is performed by consultant plastic surgeons in our CQC-regulated clinic. We don’t push surgery on patients who don’t need it, and we don’t keep selling injectables to patients whose anatomy has moved beyond what injectables can fix.


Consultation is structured, in-person, and includes honest advice on what we think will work and what we think won’t.


To book a consultation, call , email , or complete the contact form below.


Centre for Surgery
Baker Street, London W1U 6RN

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Call or fill in the form below. A patient coordinator will call you within one working day to book your consultation with the consultant best matched to your enquiry.








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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic surgery through GMC-registered specialist surgeons. Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body contouring procedures such as and . Patient safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.


Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.




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