A non-surgical injectable treatment that temporarily relaxes specific facial muscles to smooth dynamic wrinkles like frown lines, forehead lines, and crow's feet. Compare Austin clinics below and request a free consultation.
Typical cost in Austin
$200–$600
per treatment area · USD
A general range for Austin, rounded for guidance. Confirm exact pricing with each clinic.
Clinic directory
Botox clinics in Austin
Featured clinics appear first. Tap any clinic to view details and request a consultation.
Rated 5★ by 199 Google reviewers, Austin Aesthetic Atelier - Medical Spa + Wellness (Austin) offers BBL Photofacial, Botox, Chemical Peel and 10 more treatments. View the full profile and request a free consultation.
Rated 5★ by 579 Google reviewers, AustinMD Aesthetics & Wellness (Cedar Park) offers BBL Photofacial, Botox, Chemical Peel and 12 more treatments. View the full profile and request a free consultation.
Fresh Aesthetics in Austin is a med spa rated 5★ across 226 Google reviews, offering Botox, Chemical Peel, Dermal Fillers and 10 more treatments. See details, compare local pricing, and request a free consultation.
Skin Envy Austin- Central in Austin is a med spa rated 5★ across 343 Google reviews, offering BBL Photofacial, Botox, Chemical Peel and 12 more treatments. See details, compare local pricing, and request a free consultation.
Skin Pharm offers BBL Photofacial, Botox, Chemical Peel and 9 more treatments from its West Lake Hills location and is rated 5★ across 147 Google reviews. Compare pricing and request a free consultation on ClinicCompass.
Rated 5★ by 160 Google reviewers, Westlake Aesthetics & Wellness (Austin) offers BBL Photofacial, Botox, Chemical Peel and 12 more treatments. View the full profile and request a free consultation.
Rated 5★ by 550 Google reviewers, Wild and Beautiful Natural Aesthetics (Austin) offers BBL Photofacial, Botox, Chemical Peel and 10 more treatments. View the full profile and request a free consultation.
A West Lake med spa offering Emsculpt NEO, laser hair removal, laser resurfacing, and Ultherapy skin tightening, with a focus on natural-looking results.
A West Lake Hills practice offering Morpheus8, laser skin resurfacing (ProFractional, MOXI, NanoLaserPeel), and Sofwave skin tightening, with additional Austin-area locations.
A Mueller-area medical spa offering CoolSculpting, Emsculpt NEO, and Morpheus8 RF microneedling alongside injectables and facials.
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Local insights
Where to find Botox in Austin
14 clinics offer Botox across the Austin metro
— with providers in Austin, Cedar Park, Downtown, West Lake Hills, South Lamar, West Lake, Westlake, Clarksville, Mueller.
Austin's established aesthetic clusters around Downtown, South Congress (SoCo), Westlake, where pricing
typically runs at the upper end of the local range.
Local cost for Botox in Austin typically falls between $200–$600 per treatment area . Compare the 14 listed
clinics above, request consultations from your top
two or three picks, and confirm exact pricing directly with each provider.
The Austin market, honestly
Austin's botox market grew up with the city — young-professional preventative dosing is the local signature, and 'baby botox' requests outpace full corrections at many Domain and SoCo studios. Pricing runs $12–16/unit, between Houston's value and Dallas's premium. The city's boom brought injector quality up fast, but also volume shops: Austin is a check-the-credentials market.
About Botox
A non-surgical injectable treatment that temporarily relaxes specific facial muscles to smooth dynamic wrinkles like frown lines, forehead lines, and crow's feet.
Sessions
Every 3–4 months
Downtime
None — return to normal activity right away
Good candidate
Adults with dynamic wrinkles (lines that appear when you frown, raise your brow, or smile) who want a subtle, refreshed look without surgery
The most popular non-surgical cosmetic treatment in the world
Smooths frown lines, forehead lines, and crow's feet in a 10–15 minute appointment
Effects appear within days and last 3–4 months
Used preventatively as well as correctively
Multiple FDA-approved brands (Botox, Dysport, Xeomin, Jeuveau, Daxxify) with similar results
Typical Botox pricing in Austin runs $200–$600 per treatment area. The biggest variables are the provider's experience level and the specific device or product used — newer technology and senior injectors price at the upper end. Pricing is quoted in US dollars (USD). Request a consultation from any of our listed Austin clinics for a personalized quote.
How many Botox providers are in Austin?
ClinicCompass lists 14 verified Austin-area clinics offering Botox, concentrated in Austin, Cedar Park, Downtown, West Lake Hills. Each listing includes real Google ratings so you can compare reputable options side by side before booking a consultation.
Who's the top-rated Botox provider in Austin?
Among our 14 listed Austin providers for Botox, Austin Aesthetic Atelier - Medical Spa + Wellness currently holds the highest verified Google rating at 5★ across 199+ reviews (located in Austin). "Best" is subjective — compare 2–3 Austin clinics before committing.
How is Botox different from similar products on the market?
Botox (also known as Neurotoxin, Botulinum toxin) is one of several options in this treatment category. The main differences vs. alternatives are formulation, onset time, duration, and pricing. Your Austin provider can recommend the best fit for your specific goals during consultation.
How should I prepare for Botox?
For 1 week before: avoid blood-thinning supplements (vitamin E, fish oil, gingko, garlic supplements) and over-the-counter NSAIDs (Advil, Motrin, aspirin) unless medically necessary — these increase bruising risk. Avoid alcohol for 24 hours prior. Arrive with clean, makeup-free skin if possible. Eat beforehand to avoid lightheadedness. Plan to avoid laying flat for 4 hours after Botox.
What does Botox do exactly?
Botox is a purified protein (botulinum toxin type A) that temporarily blocks the nerve signals telling specific muscles to contract. Injected in tiny doses into targeted facial muscles, it relaxes them just enough to smooth dynamic wrinkles — the lines that appear when you frown, raise your eyebrows, or smile. It doesn't add volume; it doesn't change your face shape. Within 2 weeks, the treated area looks smoother at rest. Effects last 3–4 months, then the muscle gradually regains movement.
What is the biggest risk of Botox?
The most common real risk is unintended muscle weakness near the injection site — typically a temporary drooping eyelid (ptosis) or asymmetric brow if the toxin migrates slightly from where it was injected. This is almost always tied to either improper injection technique or excessive rubbing/laying down too soon after treatment, and it resolves on its own in 4–8 weeks as the Botox wears off. Serious systemic side effects are extremely rare at cosmetic doses. Choosing an experienced injector is the single biggest factor in avoiding all of these.
What is the 4-hour rule after Botox?
The "4-hour rule" means don't lay flat, exercise vigorously, or massage the treated area for the first 4 hours after your Botox appointment. The concern is that lying down, intense head movement, or rubbing the area could allow the Botox to migrate from the intended muscle to nearby muscles — potentially causing a droopy eyelid or asymmetric result. Most providers also recommend avoiding heat (saunas, hot yoga) and alcohol for 24 hours. After 4 hours, you can resume normal activity. Some providers extend this to 6 hours for extra caution.
How much do 20 units of Botox usually cost?
At the US average of $10–$20 per unit, 20 units of Botox typically costs $200–$400. Twenty units is a common dose for treating the glabella (the "11s" frown lines between your brows) or for a light forehead treatment. A more complete full-face treatment usually uses 40–70 units, putting most appointments in the $400–$1,400 range. Pricing varies meaningfully by city and provider experience — premium markets and senior injectors charge at the upper end.
What age is best to start getting Botox?
There's no universal "right" age — it depends on when your dynamic wrinkles start bothering you, not what's on your driver's license. Most providers see people start in their late 20s or early 30s for "preventative Botox," which uses small doses to soften lines before they become etched. Starting later (40s, 50s, 60s) is equally valid; you'll just be treating existing wrinkles rather than preventing new ones. There's no medical benefit to starting young if your skin isn't showing dynamic lines yet — wait until you actually want the result.
Is Botox worth it after 60?
Yes, for most patients. After 60, Botox can still meaningfully soften dynamic forehead and frown lines and crow's feet. It won't address loose skin, lost volume, or the deeper static wrinkles that have set in at rest — those typically need fillers, skin tightening, or surgery in combination. Many older patients get the best results from a combination plan: smaller Botox doses to soften muscle activity, plus fillers or skin tightening for volume and laxity. Discuss realistic expectations with your provider during consultation.
Is Botox a neurotoxin? Is it safe?
Yes, Botox is technically a neurotoxin — derived from the bacterium Clostridium botulinum. But the cosmetic dose is incredibly small (a fraction of a microgram), purified, and used in localized injections. It has been FDA-approved for cosmetic use since 2002 and is one of the most studied injectables in medicine, with decades of safety data across millions of treatments. Safety depends heavily on injector skill — choose a board-certified physician, PA, NP, or RN with extensive injection experience for the lowest risk of complications.
What's the difference between Botox and fillers?
Different problems, different products. Botox relaxes muscles to soften wrinkles caused by movement (forehead lines, frown lines, crow's feet). Fillers add volume to areas that have lost it (cheeks, lips, smile lines, jawline). They're commonly used together — Botox for the upper face, fillers for the lower face — for a balanced refresh. Botox lasts 3–4 months; fillers last 9–18 months. Per treatment, fillers cost more upfront but last longer.
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