Tag

Crow's Feet

Crow's feet are the fine lines that fan out from the corners of your eyes — most visible when you smile or squint. These periorbital wrinkles respond well to neuromodulators, and Dr. Borakowski can add collagen-rebuilding treatments when lines have become etched into the skin.

See all treatments

Lines that show when you smile, soften when you don't — and grow into something more permanent. Treatment routing for the dynamic-then-static path, physician-led in Scottsdale, AZ.


Fine Lines Fanning From the Eyes

Crow’s feet — sometimes called laugh lines — are the fan-shaped fine lines and wrinkles that radiate from the outer corners of your eyes. Years of facial expressions, sun exposure, and the natural aging process slowly change them from dynamic lines that appear only when you smile to static lines that stay visible at rest. Most of us notice crow’s feet in photos before we notice them in the mirror.

At Desert Bloom, Dr. Natalya Borakowski, NMD begins every crow’s feet assessment with a single question: are your lines still purely dynamic, or have they started to settle into the skin? That answer determines whether the plan is a neuromodulator alone, a neuromodulator paired with RF microneedling, or — for deep, etched wrinkles with significant photodamage — a resurfacing escalation.

Crow’s feet are one concern within the broader family of wrinkles we address at Desert Bloom, alongside frown lines and forehead lines. All three route back to the anti-aging hub.

At a Glance

Scope. Most crow’s feet plans start with a neuromodulator — Botox, Dysport, or Daxxify — to relax the orbicularis oculi and soften the fan pattern. Once lines become etched at rest, RF microneedling rebuilds periorbital collagen; CO2 laser resurfacing is reserved for deep wrinkles with significant photodamage. Current pricing for each treatment is on our price list.

Provider & candidacy. Dr. Borakowski, NMD oversees all crow’s feet treatment planning. Neuromodulators are appropriate across a wide range of skin types; RF microneedling and CO2 resurfacing are screened case by case. Active periorbital infection, pregnancy, breastfeeding, and certain neuromuscular conditions are contraindications.

Downtime & how to start. Neuromodulators carry no downtime; RF microneedling involves 24–48 hours of redness; CO2 resurfacing requires 7–10 days of recovery. A 30-minute consultation maps which approach fits your specific presentation.

What Are Crow’s Feet?

Crow’s feet are the wrinkles that spread outward from the outer corners of your eyes. They begin as dynamic wrinkles — visible only when you smile, squint, or laugh — and gradually develop into static wrinkles that remain when your face is fully at rest.

Crow's feet wrinkles — fine lines at outer eye corners

The skin around the eyes is the thinnest on the face, with minimal subcutaneous fat and fewer oil glands than any other region. That’s why the delicate eye area shows fine lines and wrinkles earlier than the forehead or cheeks. The outer corners move with almost every facial expression — blinking, smiling, even reading in bright light — and each contraction of the orbicularis oculi slowly folds the upper layers of skin along the same lines. Over time, collagen production slows, elastin breaks down, and those folds settle into visible creases.

We classify crow’s feet in two stages because the stage decides the treatment. Dynamic crow’s feet only appear with movement — address the muscle and the appearance of lines improves dramatically. Static crow’s feet have become etched into the skin itself — the muscle contribution is still there, but now there’s structural damage underneath. Most patients arrive somewhere in between, and a careful assessment during your consultation reveals exactly where you stand.

What Causes Crow’s Feet?

Crow’s feet are a natural part of the aging process, but a handful of specific factors decide how early they appear and how deep they become. In climates like Scottsdale — intense UV, low humidity, frequent squinting — the aging process around the eyes tends to move faster than it would elsewhere.

Dynamic Crow’s Feet

Appear only when you smile, squint, or laugh. The muscle contracts, folds the skin, and the crease disappears when your face relaxes. These are static wrinkles in the making — not yet etched into the dermis.

  • When visible: only in motion
  • Typical age: late 20s to mid-30s
  • What’s happening: orbicularis oculi contraction folding thin periorbital skin
First-line: Botox, Dysport, or Daxxify

Static Crow’s Feet

Stay visible even when your face is completely at rest. Collagen and elastin loss have etched the lines into the skin itself. The muscle contribution is still present, but the structural damage is now the larger problem.

  • When visible: at rest and in motion
  • Typical age: mid-30s onward (earlier with sun damage)
  • What’s happening: collagen loss + elastin breakdown — deep wrinkles etched into skin
Plan: neuromodulator + RF microneedling or CO2 resurfacing

Best Treatments for Crow’s Feet

We choose between treatment options based on whether your crow’s feet are still dynamic, have become static, or have reached the deep, etched stage with surrounding photodamage. The decision is rarely about one product being better — it’s about matching the right approach to the stage of the line. Below: the three neuromodulators for dynamic lines first, then the two resurfacing approaches for static and deep wrinkles.

Botox — Precise First-Line

Best for

Dynamic crow’s feet that appear only in motion. First-time patients who want conservative titration before committing to anything longer-lasting.

What makes it distinct

Predictable 3–4 month duration lets Dr. Borakowski dial in dosing around the thin periorbital zone — typically 4–8 units per side — without locking in an effect for half a year. The botulinum toxin relaxes the orbicularis oculi at precise points, softening the fan pattern without altering your natural expressions.

Choose this if

You’re new to neuromodulators, or you want the standard, most-studied option for lateral canthal lines.

Dysport — Broader Spread

Best for

Dynamic crow’s feet that fan widely across the temple. Patients who have tried Botox and want to compare diffusion profiles.

What makes it distinct

Dysport diffuses slightly more broadly from each injection point than Botox — which many providers find useful when the crow’s feet pattern spreads into a wider fan. Same botulinum toxin mechanism, different spread characteristic. Duration is similar to Botox at 3–4 months.

Choose this if

Your crow’s feet are wide and you or your provider prefer a slightly broader diffusion. The decision is often made during consultation based on your line pattern and treatment history.

Daxxify — Six-Month Duration

Best for

Established neuromodulator users who want to reduce how often they come in. Six-month duration often meaningfully reduces annual visit frequency for crow’s feet maintenance.

What makes it distinct

A PEG-peptide carrier extends the duration of daxibotulinumtoxinA to approximately six months — roughly double a standard Botox cycle. It solves the same dynamic-line problem but fits patients who want longer intervals between procedures.

Choose this if

You’ve already confirmed that neuromodulator works well for your crow’s feet. Not the best starting point for first-time patients — conservative dosing is harder to fine-tune when effects last months rather than weeks.

When crow’s feet remain visible at rest between neuromodulator cycles, the plan needs to evolve beyond muscle management. These two procedures address the structural damage that botulinum toxin cannot reach.

RF microneedling for static crow's feet — collagen rebuilding around the eye
RF Microneedling — Static Lines and Skin TextureOnce crow’s feet stay visible between neuromodulator cycles, the problem has shifted from muscle movement to structural collagen loss. RF microneedling delivers radiofrequency energy into the dermis through fine needles, stimulating new collagen production and tightening the thin lateral eye skin. It treats the etched-in line that botulinum toxin alone cannot reverse. Dr. Borakowski typically pairs it with a neuromodulator to address both the dynamic and static components in the same plan. A series of 3 procedures spaced 4–6 weeks apart is standard; results develop over 3–6 months as collagen remodels.Best for: static crow’s feet, periorbital skin texture, crepe · See RF Microneedling details →
CO2 laser resurfacing for deep crow's feet — fractional ablation for entrenched periorbital wrinkles
CO2 Laser Resurfacing — Deep Etched LinesFor deep crow’s feet with significant periorbital photodamage — when wrinkles are truly etched and the surrounding skin shows texture irregularities and sun-damaged tone — fractional ablative CO2 resurfacing is the most assertive approach available. It removes damaged skin cells and triggers deeper collagen remodeling than RF microneedling can reach. Recovery time is 7–10 days, and the procedure is best suited to patients who have prior aesthetic experience and understand what they’re accepting. This is never the first answer — it’s the escalation when more conservative approaches have reached their limit.Best for: deep static crow’s feet, periorbital photodamage, non-first-timers · See CO2 Resurfacing details →

Beyond these five featured options, adjunct care is chosen case by case: SkinVive by Juvéderm as a hyaluronic acid skin booster for thin, dehydrated periorbital skin; the Unicorn Facial (PRX-T33 chemical peel) for gentle resurfacing and skin quality; iontophoresis to drive brightening actives into the delicate eye area; and Elluminate Mini for overall skin maintenance around the eyes. These refine results — they don’t replace a neuromodulator or RF microneedling as the primary answer for crow’s feet.

Compare All Treatment Options

A side-by-side look at the five featured crow’s feet treatments — what each does best, how it works, how many sessions to expect, and what recovery looks like.

FeatureBotoxDysportDaxxifyRF MicroneedlingCO2 Laser
Best forDynamic crow’s feet — first-lineDynamic crow’s feet — wider spreadDynamic crow’s feet — fewer visitsStatic lines, collagen loss, periorbital textureDeep etched crow’s feet, photodamage
MechanismBotulinum toxin — relaxes orbicularis oculiBotulinum toxin — slightly broader diffusionDaxibotulinumtoxin A — extended-duration neurotoxinRF energy + microneedles — stimulates collagen productionFractional ablation — removes damaged skin cells, deeper remodeling
Sessions typicalEvery 3–4 monthsEvery 3–4 monthsEvery 5–6 monthsSeries of 3, 4–6 weeks apart1 session (significant recovery)
DowntimeNoneNoneNone24–48 hrs redness7–10 days recovery
Fitzpatrick rangeAll skin typesAll skin typesAll skin typesScreened case by caseScreened case by case
Best forDynamic crow’s feet — first-line
MechanismBotulinum toxin — relaxes orbicularis oculi
Sessions typicalEvery 3–4 months
DowntimeNone
Fitzpatrick rangeAll skin types
Best forDynamic crow’s feet — wider spread
MechanismBotulinum toxin — slightly broader diffusion
Sessions typicalEvery 3–4 months
DowntimeNone
Fitzpatrick rangeAll skin types
Best forDynamic crow’s feet — fewer visits
MechanismDaxibotulinumtoxin A — extended-duration neurotoxin
Sessions typicalEvery 5–6 months
DowntimeNone
Fitzpatrick rangeAll skin types
Best forStatic lines, collagen loss, periorbital texture
MechanismRF energy + microneedles — stimulates collagen production
Sessions typicalSeries of 3, 4–6 weeks apart
Downtime24–48 hrs redness
Fitzpatrick rangeScreened case by case
Best forDeep etched crow’s feet, photodamage
MechanismFractional ablation — removes damaged skin cells, deeper remodeling
Sessions typical1 session (significant recovery)
Downtime7–10 days recovery
Fitzpatrick rangeScreened case by case
1 / 5
swipe to compare

How to Prevent Crow’s Feet

You can slow crow’s feet significantly with a consistent skin care routine — but nothing short of addressing the muscle itself prevents them entirely. What prevention does is buy you years, and keep dynamic lines from transitioning to static ones sooner than they need to. The single most effective step is daily sun protection, applied to the eye area specifically.

💡
The one prevention step most people skip

Apply SPF around the eyes with a clean fingertip or cotton swab — not by spreading sunscreen across the face with your palms. The delicate eye area stings badly when product migrates in, which is the real reason people stop protecting it. Use a mineral SPF formulated for the eye area, or apply with a light tapping motion and let it dry before opening your eyes fully.

Safety, Skin Type, and Candidacy

Most people who are bothered by crow’s feet are good candidates for at least one of the options on this page. The right starting point depends on whether your lines are dynamic or static, your skin type and Fitzpatrick number, your treatment history, and any active conditions we need to screen for. Dr. Borakowski reviews all of this before any recommendation is made.

Conditions That Affect Eligibility for Crow's Feet Treatment

Neuromodulators (Botox, Dysport, Daxxify): Not appropriate during pregnancy or breastfeeding. Contraindicated with active periorbital infection, a recent herpes zoster (shingles) outbreak near the eye, or diagnosed neuromuscular disorders (myasthenia gravis, Eaton-Lambert syndrome). Accutane use within the past 6 months affects RF microneedling and resurfacing candidacy — discuss with Dr. Borakowski at your consultation.

Drooping eyelids (ptosis) or excess upper-eyelid skin: If your primary concern is eyelid skin that sits on your lashes or significantly impairs your vision, that is usually a surgical question — blepharoplasty or a plastic surgery referral — not a crow’s feet treatment. We screen for this and will tell you honestly if a referral is the better path.

Active skin flare or infection: Any active periorbital rash, infection, or inflammatory condition defers all laser and injection procedures until the area is stable.

Why Patients Choose Desert Bloom for Crow’s Feet

Dr. Natalya Borakowski is a Naturopathic Doctor with more than 20 years of clinical experience in aesthetic medicine. Her approach to crow’s feet — and to every plan at the clinic — is to match the procedure to the problem rather than default to a single answer for everyone. That means evaluating muscle activity, skin thickness, line depth, your Fitzpatrick type, and your long-term goals before any recommendation is made.

For most patients, the plan starts conservatively: a neuromodulator to address the dynamic component, with clear language about what to expect and when it makes sense to add a collagen-stimulating procedure. Not to erase your expressions — to keep them yours as your skin ages on its own terms. Learn more about Dr. Borakowski →

Dr. Borakowski examining crow's feet during treatment consultation
Dr. Natalya Borakowski, NMD
Medically reviewed byDr. Natalya Borakowski, NMDFounder, Desert Bloom Skincare
“With crow’s feet, the question is almost never whether to treat — it’s recognizing when the lines have stopped being purely dynamic. That’s the moment the plan needs to evolve, and that recognition is what I protect for my patients.”

Frequently asked questions

At what age do crow’s feet usually start? Most people notice their first dynamic crow’s feet between the late 20s and mid-30s — these are the fine lines that appear only when smiling or squinting. Static wrinkles that stay visible at rest typically develop in the mid-30s onward, earlier for people with significant sun exposure, fair skin, or strong orbicularis muscle activity. Genetics plays a meaningful role: some people develop deep wrinkles around the eyes a decade earlier than their peers.
Can crow’s feet be prevented completely? No. Because crow’s feet are driven by natural facial expressions and the inevitable aging process, they cannot be completely prevented. What you can do is slow their development: daily sun protection factor 30+, polarized sunglasses, a nightly retinol or tretinoin, and a balanced skin care routine all contribute. For people with strong orbicularis activity, early conservative neuromodulator use can delay the transition from dynamic to static lines by several years — but some degree of crow’s feet formation is inevitable.
Do eye creams and retinol actually work on crow’s feet? Prescription tretinoin and well-formulated retinol products improve fine lines and wrinkles over several months by stimulating collagen production in the upper layers of skin. Peptides and antioxidant serums (vitamin C) support that process. Most over-the-counter eye creams hydrate and temporarily plump the skin surface but do not change underlying structure. A moisturizer still matters — dry skin makes existing wrinkles look deeper — but topical creams are part of a care routine, not a substitute for in-clinic procedures when lines are already etched.
How many units of Botox are needed for crow’s feet? Typical dosing is 4 to 8 units of Botox per side, though the exact amount depends on orbicularis muscle strength and how wide the fan pattern spreads. Dr. Borakowski starts conservatively in first-time patients and adjusts at the two-week follow-up if needed. Patients who have had botulinum toxin before generally have a known dose that works for them; new patients build that history over the first one or two treatment cycles.
What’s the difference between dynamic and static crow’s feet? Dynamic crow’s feet appear only when you smile, squint, or laugh — they’re created by orbicularis oculi muscle movement and respond well to botulinum toxin (Botox, Dysport, or Daxxify) alone. Static crow’s feet stay visible when your face is fully at rest because collagen and elastin loss has etched the wrinkles into the skin structure. Static lines need both a neuromodulator (to address the muscle) and a collagen-stimulating procedure such as RF microneedling (to address the structural damage).
Does RF microneedling hurt around the eyes? The periorbital area is sensitive, so a topical numbing cream is applied for 45 minutes before the procedure. Most patients describe the sensation as a firm prickling with heat — uncomfortable but manageable. There’s mild redness and tenderness for 24 to 48 hours afterward. The periorbital skin heals quickly; most people are back to their normal routine within two days. Results from the collagen production process develop gradually over the following 3–6 months.
When is CO2 laser resurfacing better than RF microneedling for crow’s feet? CO2 resurfacing is reserved for deep crow’s feet with significant periorbital photodamage — when wrinkles are truly etched and the surrounding skin shows texture irregularities, pigment changes, or sun-damaged tone. RF microneedling is the right choice for moderate static lines with less downtime, and for patients who prefer a gradual collagen-building approach. The key difference is depth and recovery: CO2 removes damaged skin cells and reaches deeper collagen remodeling, but requires 7–10 days of real recovery. RF microneedling is more incremental and needs a series of procedures; CO2 is more assertive and typically done in a single session.

Book Your Crow’s Feet Assessment in Scottsdale

A crow’s feet consultation at Desert Bloom takes about 30 minutes. Dr. Borakowski will assess whether your lines are still dynamic, whether static wrinkles have developed, and which combination of treatment options makes sense for your skin type, history, and goals.

There’s no pressure to proceed with a procedure on the same day — a good consultation sometimes ends with clarity and a plan, not a needle. If early prevention is your goal, that conversation is just as valuable as any treatment.

References

  1. Ascher B, Rzany B, Grover R. “Efficacy and Safety of Botulinum Toxin Type A in the Treatment of Lateral Crow's Feet.” Dermatologic Surgery. 2009. DOI
  2. Kiripolsky M, Goldman M. “Safety and efficacy of administering abobotulinumtoxinA through a single injection point when treating lateral periocular rhytides.” Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology. 2011. DOI
  3. Minokadeh A. “Commentary on Phase 3 Study of OnabotulinumtoxinA Distributed Between Frontalis, Glabellar Complex, and Lateral Canthal Areas.” Dermatologic Surgery. 2019. DOI
  4. Shenoy C, Agrawal R, Chandrashekar B, Lalchandani R. “Comparison of safety and efficacy of two brands of botulinum toxin A for the treatment of lateral canthal lines (crow's feet): A split-face study.” Journal of Cutaneous and Aesthetic Surgery. 2023. DOI
  5. Cheles D, Vinshtok Y, Gershonowitz A. “Microneedling With RF-Assisted Skin Penetration Improves the Hard-to-Treat Periorbital Wrinkles: Nonrandomized Clinical Trial.” Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology. 2024. DOI
  6. Wu X, Cen Q, Zhu J, Shang Y, Lin X. “Effectiveness and safety of nonablative fractional laser and infrared bipolar radiofrequency for treating periorbital wrinkles.” Journal of Cosmetic and Laser Therapy. 2022. DOI

Individual results vary. Botox, Dysport, and Daxxify are FDA-approved neuromodulators; use for crow’s feet is either on-label (Botox for lateral canthal lines) or off-label depending on the specific product and dosing. All procedures discussed on this page are medical and carry some risk of bruising, swelling, asymmetry, or other side effects. Dr. Borakowski reviews the complete list of potential risks during your consultation.

Content reviewed by Dr. Natalya Borakowski, NMD · Last updated April 2026.

Treatments

  1. Botox in Scottsdale, AZ | Cost, Areas & Results | Desert Bloom$10.50/unit
    15 min
  2. CO2 Laser Resurfacing$1500
    60 minutes
  3. Daxxify Injections Near Me | Cost & Units | Scottsdale AZ$6/unit
    15 min
  4. Desert Skin Reset — 3-Step Facial Program299
    45 minutes and up and up
  5. Dysport$3.5/Unit
    15 minutes
  6. Laser facial$275
    60 minutes
  7. Microneedling$495
    120 minutes
  8. Non-Surgical Facial MasculinizationOn demand
    60 min
  9. Non-surgical Facial FeminizationOn demand
    60 and up
  10. RF Microneedling$800
    90 and up
  11. SKINVIVE by JUVÉDERM$650
    60 min

Consultation in skin care clinic

Desert Bloom Skincare Center offers personalized skincare consultation to help you achieve a flawless and radiant complexion. Book your appointment today and let our expert team of skincare professionals address your specific concerns and help you reach your skincare goals.

Visit Our Scottsdale Aesthetic Center

Address

10752 N 89th Place, Suite 122B,
ScottsdaleAZ 85260.

Phone:(480) 567-8180

E-mail:info@desertbloomskincare.com

Get Directions →

Location & Directions

Desert Bloom Skincare is conveniently located in the Shea Corridor of North Scottsdale, within Edwards Professional Park I — minutes from HonorHealth Scottsdale Shea Medical Center and the Mayo Clinic Scottsdale Campus.

↑↓
From the North / South: Take Loop 101 (Pima Freeway) and exit at E Shea Blvd. We are located just East of the freeway.
From Paradise Valley: Head East on E Shea Blvd toward North 90th Street.
P
Parking: Ample free parking is available directly in front of Suite 122B.

Areas We Serve

We proudly provide expert non-surgical rhinoplasty and PDO thread lifts to patients across the Southwest:

  • ScottsdaleNorth Scottsdale · McCormick Ranch · Gainey Ranch
  • Paradise Valley
  • PhoenixArcadia · Biltmore · North Phoenix
  • Fountain Hills
  • Cave Creek & Carefree

Contact usDo you have any questions?