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Top Treatments for Hand Rejuvenation
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The hands age in a specific, predictable way — and unlike the face, the changes are particularly to disguise. The skin on the dorsum (back) of the hand is thin, has minimal subcutaneous fat, and is exposed to UV radiation virtually every day of the year. The result, by the late 40s and 50s for most people, is a combination of volume loss (visible and veins), pigmentation changes (sun spots), and skin texture deterioration (crepey, thinning skin).
This guide covers what actually changes in ageing hands, the treatment options that genuinely work, who suits each option, and what to expect from the recovery process. The right depends entirely on which of the three problem areas — volume, pigmentation, or texture — dominates your particular situation.
What changes in ageing hands
Three distinct processes contribute to the aged appearance of the hands, and most patients are seeing some of all three:
Volume loss. The subcutaneous fat layer between the skin and the underlying tendons, muscles, and bones gradually thins with age. As this padding decreases, the underlying anatomy becomes increasingly — tendons appear as ropes running down the back of the hand, veins become more prominent, and the spaces between the bones (the metacarpal interspaces) deepen. This is often the first and most visible sign of hand ageing.
Pigmentation changes. Cumulative UV exposure produces solar lentigines (sun spots, age spots, or liver spots) — flat brown patches of increased pigmentation on the back of the hand. These appear from the 40s onward and progressively accumulate. They’re entirely cosmetic, not concerning, but for most patients they’re a significant marker of perceived age. For more on the broader topic of , see our service page.
Texture . The dermis thins, collagen and elastin production decline, and the skin loses its springy, smooth . The result is "crepey" skin — thin, slightly wrinkled, with reduced elasticity. Repeated sun exposure this process .
A useful self-assessment: pinch the back of your hand gently and let go. Younger skin springs back immediately. Older skin tents momentarily before settling. The longer the tenting, the more advanced the texture changes.
The treatment options
treatments address hand ageing, each targeting different aspects of the problem.
The most directly impactful treatment for volume loss. is placed in the subcutaneous layer between the skin and underlying tendons/veins, restoring the padding that ageing has thinned. Visible tendons and veins become substantially less prominent, and the hand contour looks softer and more youthful.
What to expect:
Recovery: mild swelling and possible small bruising for 3-5 days. Most patients return to normal activities the same day. Avoid vigorous hand use, heat exposure, and gym/manual work for 48 hours.
How long it lasts: 12 to 18 months. Hand filler typically lasts longer than facial filler because the area has less constant than the face.
For patients wanting longer-lasting volume restoration, uses the patient’s own fat — harvested by liposuction from areas like the abdomen, flanks, or thighs — and placed into the hands after careful processing.
The process:
What to expect: performed under local with optional sedation. Takes 90 minutes to 2 hours total. More substantial swelling than filler for 7-10 days. Final result visible at 3 months once the surviving fat (typically 50-70% of what was placed) has integrated.
How long it lasts: potentially permanent for the fat that survives. Most patients maintain a meaningful proportion of the volume long-term, though occasional top-up sessions are sometimes needed.
Considerations: fat transfer is more involved than filler — both surgically and in recovery — but for patients wanting durable restoration with their own tissue rather than gel-based products, it’s the more comprehensive option.
Solar lentigines respond well to targeted laser treatment. At Centre for Surgery, we use Fotona Er:YAG laser technology to address pigmentation through two complementary modes:
SMOOTH mode (non-ablative). Delivers heat to the dermis without breaking the surface of the skin. Stimulates collagen production, improves overall skin quality, and gradually reduces pigmentation through gentle thermal effect.
TwinLight fractional mode (ablative). Creates micro-channels in the skin to trigger collagen remodelling and target pigmented spots more directly. More effective for established dark spots, with slightly more recovery (mild redness and crusting for 3-5 days).
What to expect:
Recovery: SMOOTH mode — mild pinkness for a few hours, no downtime. Ablative — 3-5 days of mild redness, sometimes scabbing on treated spots, before the pigmentation flakes away revealing fresh skin.
For more on the laser technology generally, see our guide on .
For crepey skin and overall texture improvement, injectable treatments that bioremodel the dermis from within can produce meaningful change:
uses a unique high-concentration HA formulation injected at specific points to stimulate fibroblast activity and improve skin . useful for the back of the hand. Two sessions 4 weeks apart, with maintenance every 6 to 9 months. See our .
uses DNA fractions to stimulate skin regeneration. Works on similar to Profhilo but through different biological mechanisms. Often combined with Profhilo or used in patients who want more aggressive texture improvement.
(Redensity 1 and others) combine hyaluronic acid with amino acids, antioxidants, and minerals. Less aggressive than Profhilo or polynucleotides but suitable for patients with early texture .
Most patients benefit from combining approaches rather than relying on any single treatment. A typical combined plan might include:
Treatments are typically sequenced over weeks rather than performed simultaneously, with a 2-week minimum gap between energy-based and injectable .
Who suits which approach
Predominantly volume loss (visible tendons, deepened metacarpal spaces, prominent veins) → filler is the first-line approach. Fat transfer if the patient wants longer-lasting with their own tissue.
Predominantly pigmentation (multiple sun spots, reasonable skin texture and volume) → laser treatment as the priority.
Predominantly texture changes (crepey skin, fine lines, thin-looking skin) → Profhilo or polynucleotides as the priority.
Combined ageing (volume, pigmentation, and texture all visible) → combined plan addressing each component in sequence.
Very advanced ageing with significant skin laxity → none of these treatments produce dramatic results; the underlying problem requires surgical skin reduction, which is not typically performed on the hands due to scarring considerations.
Preventive maintenance
For all hand rejuvenation patients, lifestyle factors significantly affect both the longevity of treatment results and https://www.vitamininjections.co.uk) the rate of continued ageing:
Daily broad-spectrum SPF on the hands. The single highest-impact preventive measure. UV exposure drives both pigmentation and texture changes. Apply SPF 30+ to the hands every morning regardless of season, and reapply after handwashing.
Hand cream with active ingredients. Vitamin C, retinol (at night), niacinamide, and acid all benefit hand skin. Apply morning and evening.
Protective gloves for harsh chemicals. Cleaning products, detergents, and gardening chemicals damage skin barrier function. Use gloves to limit exposure.
Limit hot water immersion. Repeated hot dishwashing or hand washing damages the skin . Use lukewarm water where possible.
Don’t smoke. Smoking accelerates skin ageing throughout the body, including the hands.
These habits don’t existing damage but they substantially slow further deterioration and extend the duration of treatment results.
Cost
A typical combined treatment plan for moderate hand ageing might involve £1,500-£3,000 in total spend across a treatment course over 2-3 months, with maintenance roughly annually.
, including 0% APR, are available across all treatments.
Risks and considerations
For filler: minor and swelling, lump formation (rare), vascular (very rare in this area but recognised). Reversible with hyalase if needed.
For fat transfer: donor site discomfort, asymmetry between hands, partial absorption of placed fat (this is expected — fat is sometimes in two stages for this reason).
For laser treatment: temporary darkening of treated spots before they fade, very rarely persistent hyperpigmentation or hypopigmentation. Risk is higher in with darker skin tones — patient selection and conservative laser parameters mitigate this.
For Profhilo and polynucleotides: very low risk profile. Minor bruising at points; mild tenderness for hours.
A thorough consultation discusses your individual risk profile based on skin type, medical history, and the treatment plan.
Common questions
Not when conservatively dosed. The aim is restoration of natural contour, not adding visible bulk. Done well, the hands look refreshed and younger without obvious filler appearance.
Filler — immediately, with continued improvement over 2 weeks as swelling resolves. Fat transfer — final result at 3 months. Laser — pigmentation darkening then fading over 2-4 weeks. Profhilo — gradual improvement over 4-8 weeks after the second session.
Some can be combined (filler + Profhilo, sometimes). Others need sequencing with gaps (laser + injectables). Your treatment plan will sequence the components appropriately.
Each hand is individually treated, but both hands are addressed in the same session. Small differences in absorption or healing can produce subtle asymmetry — this is typically corrected at follow-up if needed.
Many patients address the hands at the same time as facial work. This is — the hands often "age out" of the face if neglected, becoming a more obvious marker of age than the face itself. Combining facial and hand work produces more coherent overall results.
Prominent hand veins respond to filler placement that increases the surrounding subcutaneous volume — this reduces vein visibility without affecting the veins themselves. Direct treatment of hand veins (sclerotherapy or excision) is occasionally performed but not for cosmetic reasons.
Yes — and increasingly do. The treatment approach is similar for men and women, though men typically opt for more conservative volume restoration to preserve a more anatomically masculine appearance.
HA filler can be dissolved with hyalase if needed. See our guide on — the same principles apply for hand filler. Fat transfer is not reversible — fat that has integrated is permanent. Laser treatment effects are gradual and don’t require reversal in normal circumstances.
Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·
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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 . 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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