When your jawline starts losing its edge — the non-surgical paths that restore definition.
That slow rounding of the lower face — where a once-defined jawline softens into a continuous curve with the neck — is one of the most consistent changes patients notice in their mid-40s and beyond. Jowling is not a single problem. It is the visible result of four simultaneous processes: bone resorption that reduces the mandibular scaffold, SMAS and soft-tissue descent, loss of skin elasticity from collagen and elastin decline, and fat-pad migration from the mid-face into the pre-jowl sulcus.
Dr. Natalya Borakowski, NMD approaches jowling the same way she approaches every structural concern: identify which driver or combination of drivers is dominant, then match the treatment to that driver. Treating all jowling with filler, or all jowling with threads, produces mediocre results. A plan built around your anatomy produces a defined jawline that still looks like you.
See also: Weak Chin — often co-presents with jowling. And Aesthetic Facial Balancing for multi-driver lower-face plans.
At a Glance
- Scope
- Five non-surgical routes address jowling depending on the driver: PDO Thread Lift for SMAS descent, Jawline Filler (Restylane / RHA) for bone-volume loss, Virtue RF Microneedling for skin laxity, Botox for masseter-driven width, and CO2 Laser for skin laxity in Fitz I–III.
- Investment
- Single treatments start at $600; combination plans typically $1,200–$2,500 per session.
- Provider & candidacy
- Dr. Borakowski treats jowling across all Fitzpatrick types. CO2 laser is reserved for Fitz I–III. Best candidates have early-to-moderate jowling and want to avoid surgery.
- Downtime
- Botox / filler: 24–48 hrs mild swelling. PDO threads: 3–5 days tenderness. RF microneedling: 24–48 hrs redness. CO2 laser: 5–7 days active healing.
- Best first step
- Complimentary 30-minute consultation — Dr. Borakowski maps the dominant drivers before any treatment is booked.
WHY IT HAPPENS
What Causes Jowling? The Four Drivers

Jowling is almost never a single-factor problem. Most patients present with two or three overlapping drivers — which is why treatment plans that match one modality to the whole problem rarely produce satisfying results. Understanding the four primary causes shapes every recommendation that follows.
The Four Drivers of Jowling
- 01
Bone Resorption — The Scaffold Shrinks
The mandible and mid-face skeleton resorb volume beginning in the mid-30s. As the bony scaffold shrinks, soft tissue has less structure to hang from. The pre-jowl sulcus deepens as the mandibular border recedes — often the earliest structural sign of jowling. Restoring that scaffold is structural reconstruction, not aesthetic enhancement.
- 02
SMAS and Soft-Tissue Descent
The superficial musculoaponeurotic system (SMAS) loses elasticity and descends. Soft tissue and fat pads slide inferiorly from the mid-face into the jowl position. SMAS descent is distinct from skin laxity — it requires mechanical repositioning, not just tightening. This is why the routes for descended versus lax tissue are fundamentally different.
- 03
Skin Laxity — Collagen & Elastin Decline
Collagen production peaks in the mid-20s and declines about 1% per year. As collagen and elastin slow and breakdown accelerates — amplified by UV, smoking, and weight fluctuations — skin loses tensile strength. The jawline border becomes a graduated slope. Stimulating collagen via RF or CO2 restores structural support from within the dermis.
- 04
Fat-Pad Migration & Masseter Effects
Buccal and malar fat pads descend with age and accumulate at the jawline, adding bulk to the jowl silhouette. Masseter hypertrophy — from clenching or bruxism — widens the lower-face outline. Note: buccal fat removal is a surgical procedure Desert Bloom does not offer; jowling is fat <em>descent</em>, not excess.
Genetics, lifestyle, and prior facial work all layer on top of these four primary drivers. Patients with a family history of early jowling, or with a history of significant weight fluctuations, often present with more pronounced or earlier-onset jowl formation than their peers. Sun exposure and smoking accelerate collagen breakdown — early signs at the lateral cheek and jawline transition are a reliable signal to act before descent becomes the dominant driver.
TREATMENT PATHS
Non-Surgical Jowling Treatment at Desert Bloom
Five treatment modalities address the different mechanisms driving jowling. Each targets a distinct layer or process — structural scaffold, soft-tissue position, skin laxity, or muscle volume. The right starting point depends on which driver is dominant at your consultation.

SMAS REPOSITIONING
PDO Thread Lift
Dissolvable polydioxanone threads placed along the mid-face and jawline physically re-anchor descended soft tissue. The lift addresses SMAS descent directly — repositioning, not just tightening. As threads dissolve over 4–6 months, they stimulate collagen that sustains support. Particularly effective in patients late 30s to early 50s. Results 12–18 months. Minimal downtime — 3–5 days of mild tenderness.

STRUCTURAL SCAFFOLD
Jawline Filler (Restylane / RHA)
Hyaluronic acid filler injected along the mandibular border compensates for bone resorption and restores structural scaffold. Strategic placement in the pre-jowl sulcus camouflages jowl fullness by elevating the depression beside it — creating a defined jawline without lifting the jowl tissue itself. Often combined with chin filler. Results 12–18 months.

COLLAGEN — ALL FITZ
Virtue RF Microneedling
The Virtue RF system delivers radiofrequency through insulated microneedles into the dermis, bypassing the epidermis. Thermal injury stimulates new collagen and remodeling — tightening from within. Safe across all Fitzpatrick types (I–VI), making it the preferred skin-tightening route for deeper skin tones. 2–3 sessions, 4–6 weeks apart. Results build over 3–6 months.

MASSETER REDUCTION
Botox Masseter / Nefertiti Lift
When masseter hypertrophy widens the lower face and amplifies the jowl silhouette, Botox into the masseter reduces bulk over 4–8 weeks. Result: a narrower outline, softer mandibular angle, less visual contrast between jowl and jawline. Also delivered as a Nefertiti lift along the platysmal bands to tighten the jawline-to-neck transition. Results 4–6 months.

FITZ I–III ONLY
CO2 Laser (Rohrer Phoenix)
Ablative CO2 resurfacing removes outer skin layers while delivering heat deep into the dermis — triggering aggressive collagen remodeling and significant tightening. Results are more dramatic than RF alone. Appropriate only for Fitzpatrick I–III due to hyperpigmentation risk in deeper skin tones. Downtime: 5–7 days of active healing. Often one session; a second may follow for moderate-to-severe laxity.
Most jowling plans combine two routes — PDO threads to reposition descended tissue plus RF microneedling or filler to address the underlying structural deficit. Aesthetic Facial Balancing coordinates these modalities in a single session when multiple drivers are present. Related concerns that often co-present: Double Chin, Facial Asymmetry, and Weak Chin.
DECIDE YOUR ROUTE
Where Does Your Jowling Sit?
Early signs, moderate descent, or advanced laxity each have a different entry point.
My jawline is starting to soften but nothing has dropped yet.
→Start with RF Microneedling — Collagen stimulation alone slows progression and restores early definition.
ModerateMy mid-face has dropped and I can see the jowl starting to form.
→Threads + Jawline Filler — Mechanical repositioning of descended SMAS plus scaffold support.
AdvancedSignificant laxity, deep marionette lines, or platysmal banding.
→Consult on referral routes — Honest assessment — surgical referral may produce a more durable result.
Compare All Jowling Treatment Options
| Feature | PDO Thread Lift | Jawline Filler | Virtue RF | Botox Masseter | CO2 Laser |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Best for | SMAS descent, mid-face and jowl repositioning | Bone resorption, pre-jowl sulcus depth | Skin laxity — all Fitzpatrick types | Masseter hypertrophy, Nefertiti lift | Pronounced skin laxity Fitz I–III only |
| Mechanism | Mechanical lift + collagen stimulation as threads dissolve | HA filler rebuilds mandibular scaffold and fills pre-jowl sulcus | RF energy into dermis stimulates new collagen production | Neuromodulator reduces masseter bulk; relaxes platysmal bands | Ablative resurfacing triggers aggressive collagen remodeling |
| Sessions | 1 (touch-up at 6–9 mo optional) | 1 (maintenance 12–18 mo) | 2–3 spaced 4–6 weeks apart | 1 + maintenance every 4–6 mo | 1 (second session for severe laxity) |
| Fitzpatrick | All types | All types | All types (I–VI) | All types | Fitz I–III ONLY — not for Fitz IV–VI |
| Downtime | 3–5 days mild tenderness | 24–48 hrs mild swelling / bruising | 24–48 hrs redness | None to minimal | 5–7 days active healing |
PDO Thread Lift
- Best for
- SMAS descent, mid-face and jowl repositioning
- Mechanism
- Mechanical lift + collagen stimulation as threads dissolve
- Sessions
- 1 (touch-up at 6–9 mo optional)
- Fitzpatrick
- All types
- Downtime
- 3–5 days mild tenderness
Jawline Filler
- Best for
- Bone resorption, pre-jowl sulcus depth
- Mechanism
- HA filler rebuilds mandibular scaffold and fills pre-jowl sulcus
- Sessions
- 1 (maintenance 12–18 mo)
- Fitzpatrick
- All types
- Downtime
- 24–48 hrs mild swelling / bruising
Virtue RF
- Best for
- Skin laxity — all Fitzpatrick types
- Mechanism
- RF energy into dermis stimulates new collagen production
- Sessions
- 2–3 spaced 4–6 weeks apart
- Fitzpatrick
- All types (I–VI)
- Downtime
- 24–48 hrs redness
Botox Masseter
- Best for
- Masseter hypertrophy, Nefertiti lift
- Mechanism
- Neuromodulator reduces masseter bulk; relaxes platysmal bands
- Sessions
- 1 + maintenance every 4–6 mo
- Fitzpatrick
- All types
- Downtime
- None to minimal
CO2 Laser
- Best for
- Pronounced skin laxity Fitz I–III only
- Mechanism
- Ablative resurfacing triggers aggressive collagen remodeling
- Sessions
- 1 (second session for severe laxity)
- Fitzpatrick
- Fitz I–III ONLY — not for Fitz IV–VI
- Downtime
- 5–7 days active healing
Common Questions About Jowling Treatment
What causes jowling — and is it really aging or something else?
What treatment works best for early jowls — under 50?
Can dermal fillers fix jowls?
Are PDO threads safe for jowls?
Are jowl treatments safe for darker skin tones?
How long do non-surgical jowl treatments last?
When is non-surgical not enough and a facelift becomes necessary?
Can losing weight cause or worsen jowls?
“When I see jowling, the first question I ask is what is driving it — bone, descent, laxity, or muscle? The answer is almost never just one thing. A plan that treats all the contributing layers produces results that look natural and hold. That is what we build at the consultation.”

Medically reviewed by
Founder, Desert Bloom Skincare · 17 Years Experience
References
- 1.
Shaw RB Jr, Katzel EB, Koltz PF, et al.. Aging of the Facial Skeleton: Aesthetic Implications and Rejuvenation Strategies. Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery; 2011.
DOI: 10.1097/PRS.0b013e3181f95b2d
Foundational study on mandibular and midface bone resorption with aging; underpins scaffold-loss rationale for jawline filler in jowling.
- 2.
Mendelson B, Wong CH. Changes in the facial skeleton with aging: implications and clinical applications in facial rejuvenation. Aesthetic Plast Surg; 2012;36(4):753-760.
DOI: 10.1007/s00266-012-9904-3
Three-dimensional analysis of bone-level facial aging; informs structural scaffold rationale.
- 3.
Funt D, Pavicic T. Dermal fillers in aesthetics: an overview of adverse events and treatment approaches. Clin Cosmet Investig Dermatol; 2013;6:295-316.
DOI: 10.2147/CCID.S50546
Trusted anchor reference for HA dermal filler safety and adverse-event profile in lower-face structural correction.
- 4.
Sundaram H, Cassuto D. Biophysical Characteristics of Hyaluronic Acid Soft-Tissue Fillers and Their Relevance to Aesthetic Applications. Plast Reconstr Surg; 2013;132(4 Suppl 2):5S-21S.
DOI: 10.1097/PRS.0b013e31829d1d40
Rheology and tissue-integration data for Restylane and RHA filler families — supports jawline scaffold restoration.
- 5.
Beleznay K, Carruthers JD, Humphrey S, Jones D. Avoiding and Treating Blindness From Fillers: A Review of the World Literature. Dermatol Surg; 2015;41(10):1097-1117.
DOI: 10.1097/DSS.0000000000000486
Vascular safety reference for filler placement in the lower face — anchors patient-safety section.
