Botox vs filler side by side
| Topic | Botox | Filler (HA) |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Temporarily relaxes targeted muscles | Fills volume under the skin |
| Solves | Movement wrinkles, jaw slimming, sweat reduction, tight shoulders | Deep folds, under-eyes, chin and lip augmentation, temples, spot contouring |
| Results show | Starts in 3–7 days, full at around 2 weeks | Immediately after injection |
| Lasts about | 3–6 months | 6–18 months |
| If you're not happy | Wait for it to wear off naturally | Can be dissolved with an enzyme |
| Can they be combined? | Yes — in many cases doctors use both, each solving a different layer of the problem | |
A simple test: which side is your problem on?
Look in the mirror and hold your face completely still. If the line or fold is still clearly visible at rest, that is a structural problem — lost volume — and that is filler's job. If the line only appears when you move your face — raising your brows, smiling, frowning — that is a muscle wrinkle, and that is Botox's job. Jaw slimming for a narrower face is muscle work directly, so it is always Botox; filling the chin or under-eyes is volume work, so it is always filler.
How does the safety differ?
Both are safe when the product is genuine and a doctor injects. But the risk profiles differ — on the Botox side, the risks are temporary effects of placement or dose, like a droopy eyelid or an uneven smile, which resolve as the substance wears off. On the filler side there is a more serious risk: injection into a blood vessel, which is why a doctor with a real command of anatomy matters especially. The upside is that HA filler can be dissolved if a problem occurs — read more in our filler article.
The bottom line
Don't start from the question of which is better. Start from your own problem — lines from movement are Botox; folds and lost volume are filler. And many faces need both, in different places, for the most natural result.