Miami Beach · South of Fifth · Suite 414

Jawline filler in Miami Beach — defined along the bone, not packed on top of it.

A mandible-anatomy-first approach using Radiesse, Juvéderm Voluma, and Restylane Lyft — placed by a University of Miami-trained nurse practitioner who personally performs every injection, with a dedicated protocol for male and female jawlines.

Kelly Wolfe, MSN, FNP-BC built her jawline practice around a discipline most Miami injectors skip: respecting the bony anatomy of the mandible rather than packing volume to a number. The right product, at the deep supra-periosteal plane, along the actual mandibular border — not stacked superficially where it will eventually migrate or read as a "wider face." Patients come here because they want the jaw they were meant to have, not a different one.

5.0

54 Google reviews

KW
Kelly Wolfe, MSN, APRN, FNP-BC

OWNER · UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI-TRAINED · FL APRN #11005134

Jawline filler in Miami Beach, at a glance.

What it treats

Weak or undefined jawline, mandibular border softening, pre-jowl hollowing, gonial angle definition, chin-to-jaw transition, profile balance, male jawline definition.

Treatment time

45–75 minute appointment for 2–4 syringes. Most patients return to errands the same hour, full activity the next day.

Results timing

HA filler (Voluma, Lyft): immediate result, fully settled by 2 weeks. Radiesse: immediate definition plus continued collagen build over 3 months.

Cost in Miami Beach

$800–$1,200 per syringe depending on product. Most patients use 2–4 syringes for meaningful definition. Per-syringe pricing, in writing, before any injection.

Who performs it

Kelly Wolfe, MSN, APRN, FNP-BC — Florida APRN #11005134, University of Miami-trained. Every injection, every appointment.

Location

1000 5th Street, Suite 414 — South of Fifth, Miami Beach 33139. $4/hr attached garage; free street parking nearby during business hours. 8 minutes from Brickell.

Why the jawline is the structural decision on the lower face.

A defined jawline is a strength signal — and the result depends on how filler is placed against the underlying mandible, not how much was used. The bony anatomy is what gives the jaw its definition; filler is just the tool that restores volume along the bone's natural contour. Most poor outcomes are placement errors, not product errors.

jawline filler for men miami beach

The mandible is not a single line. It’s a continuous bony contour that runs from the chin forward, sweeps back along the mandibular border, and angles up at the gonial angle (the corner of the jaw) toward the ear. Each sub-zone of that contour ages and deflates differently, and each one wants a slightly different injection approach. The most common mistake in Miami jawline filler isn’t using the wrong product — it’s treating the jawline as if it were one homogeneous region. It isn’t.

Volume loss along the mandible is one of the earliest visible signs of facial aging. In your 30s, the mandibular border begins to soften where it was once sharp. The pre-jowl sulcus deepens. The gonial angle loses its definition. By the 40s and 50s, jowls begin to form — not because the jaw itself changed, but because the support along the bone and the cheek above it has thinned, and the soft tissue of the lower face slides forward and downward.

Jawline filler restores the structural support along the bony anatomy. Done well, the result is a more defined, lifted, age-appropriate contour that reads as your jaw — sharper, cleaner, more rested. Done poorly, it produces the unmistakable “I had jawline filler” look: a face that’s wider rather than more defined, with palpable lumps at the angle and migration toward the neck. The difference is anatomical knowledge and conservative placement.

The mandible anatomy

Four sub-zones, one continuous bone, distinct decisions.

A jawline filler treatment plan begins with mapping which of the four mandibular sub-zones have lost definition and in what proportion. The same patient might need substantial volume at the gonial angle but almost nothing along the anterior mandibular border — or the opposite. This is the anatomical reading that determines whether a result reads as a defined jaw or an overfilled lower face.

4

DISTINCT MANDIBULAR SUB-ZONES

3

PRIMARY FILLER PRODUCTS WE OFFER

2–4

SYRINGES FOR MEANINGFUL DEFINITION

The four jawline sub-zones — and what each one wants

The mandible is four zones, not one — anterior mandible, mandibular border, gonial angle, and pre-jowl sulcus. Each ages differently. Each wants a different placement and product. Kelly maps which of yours have lost definition and treats the ones that have, in the proportion they need.

jawline filler treatment mapping miami beach
01
Profile-defining · Chin transition

Anterior mandible & chin pad

The front portion of the mandible — where the chin transitions into the body of the jaw. Strengthening this zone forward-projects the chin, lengthens the lower face visually, and improves profile balance. For patients who feel their chin "disappears" into their neck, this is usually the most impactful area to treat. Often deserves more attention than the gonial angle.

Radiesse or Voluma
Supra-periosteal
02
Light-catching contour

Mandibular border

The bony ridge running along the underside of the jaw between the chin and the gonial angle. Filler placed along this border creates the clean, light-catching jaw contour you see in photographs. The zone where over-volumization is most visible to others — discipline matters here. Conservative placement reads as definition; aggressive placement reads as a wider lower face.

Radiesse or Voluma
Supra-periosteal
03
Squareness · Strength signal

Gonial angle (the corner of the jaw)

The corner where the body of the mandible angles up toward the ear. A defined gonial angle is one of the strongest visual signals of facial strength — and one of the most-requested male jawline targets. For women, modest definition; for men, more pronounced squareness is often desired. Wrong placement here is what produces the "wider face" complaint patients report.

Radiesse (often)
Deep periosteal
04
Anti-jowl · Lift-creating

Pre-jowl sulcus

The depression just in front of the jowl, where the bony mandibular border curves toward the chin. Restoring volume in this zone is one of the most powerful non-surgical anti-jowl interventions — it smooths the transition between the jaw and the lower face, dramatically softening apparent jowls. Many patients who think they need jowl-specific treatment actually need this single zone restored.

Radiesse or Voluma
Supra-periosteal

Choosing the right filler — three categories, one mandible.

Radiesse is the structural workhorse for the jawline — its firm calcium hydroxylapatite scaffolding holds shape against bone better than HA. Juvéderm Voluma is the reversible alternative for patients who want hyaluronidase as a safety net. Restylane Lyft suits the pre-jowl sulcus where soft integration matters more than sharp definition. Soft, motion-tolerant HA fillers (the kind appropriate for lips) belong elsewhere on the face.

01 · Structural workhorse
Calcium hydroxylapatite

Radiesse

The most structural product for the jaw — firm, lifting, and collagen-building.

Calcium hydroxylapatite microspheres in a carrier gel. Provides immediate structural definition along the mandibular border AND stimulates collagen for months after — meaning the result becomes more durable over time rather than fading uniformly. Radiesse's firmer particle structure also makes it more migration-resistant than HA at the jawline. Not reversible — a consideration. For most structural jawline work, this is Kelly's first product choice. Read more about Radiesse →

Best for

Most jawline patients seeking structural definition. The standard choice for men's jawlines and for any patient prioritizing longevity over reversibility.

02 · Reversible HA option
Hyaluronic acid · structural

Juvéderm Voluma XC

The firmest HA filler — structural support with the safety of reversibility.

Cross-linked HA designed for structural mid-face and jawline work. Provides immediate, defined contour along the mandibular border with the meaningful safety advantage of being dissolvable with hyaluronidase if a result needs adjustment. Generally lasts 12–18 months at the jawline. Often chosen by first-time jawline patients who want the option to dissolve and reset if they don't like the result.

Best for

Patients who want structural jawline definition with the safety of a reversible product. First-time jawline filler patients.

03 · Softer HA
Hyaluronic acid · classic

Restylane Lyft

A reliable HA with softer integration than Voluma.

A well-priced HA with strong structural support, suitable for jawline volume and definition. Lyft has a slightly softer feel and softer integration than Voluma — often preferred for the pre-jowl sulcus where smoothness matters more than sharp definition. Reversible with hyaluronidase. Generally priced below Voluma with results lasting 12–18 months.

Best for

Patients who want a softer, more naturally-integrated jawline result or for treating the pre-jowl sulcus specifically.

04 · Combination
Multi-product protocol

Combination plans

When one product is the wrong answer for the whole jaw.

Many patients benefit from two products in the same plan: Radiesse along the mandibular border and gonial angle for structural definition, plus Voluma at the anterior mandible and pre-jowl sulcus for finer refinement. Or Radiesse for the jaw paired with HA for the chin and lip transition. Kelly designs these combinations so each product is used where it performs best.

Best for

Patients whose jawlines have multi-zone volume loss not solvable with a single product.

Men's jawline

Built different. Treated different.

Male jawline filler is not female jawline filler with more syringes. The aesthetic target is fundamentally different — and so is the protocol. In Miami, male jawline filler is one of the fastest-growing non-surgical procedures, and one of the most poorly executed across the city. Most practices apply the same approach they use for women and then wonder why the result reads “soft” or “feminine” rather than strong.

Kelly has a dedicated approach for male jawlines that addresses three anatomical realities:

  • The gonial angle gets emphasis. Male jaws are defined by a stronger, more pronounced corner at the gonial angle. Filler placement here is more deliberate and more substantial than in female protocols — but still anatomy-respecting, not packed.
  • The anterior chin pad gets projection. A strong male chin projects forward in profile. Volume placement at the anterior mandible creates the squarer, more projected chin pad that reads as masculine — without ever needing a surgical chin implant.
  • The overall syringe count is higher. Where a female jawline protocol often uses 2–3 syringes, male jawlines typically use 3–5 syringes to create meaningful structural definition across a larger anatomical surface. Radiesse is usually the right product across most of it.

The result a male patient should expect: a sharper, more defined jaw that reads as strength — not a face that looks “done” or feminized. Confidentiality is built into the practice; many male patients prefer scheduling around their work day and we make that work.

A dedicated protocol

For the male jawline.

3 → 5

Syringes · typical male protocol

The lower-face triangle

Cheek + jawline + chin — treat them as one system.

The mid-face supports the lower face. The lower face supports the jaw. The jaw supports the chin. When one zone loses volume, the zones beneath it lose their scaffold and the apparent aging accelerates. Treating the jaw in isolation often misses the cause.

This is why Kelly often recommends a combined plan rather than isolated jawline treatment. Cheek filler restores the mid-face support that originally collapsed and let the jowl form. Jawline filler defines the bony contour beneath. Chin filler completes the profile balance. The three zones together produce the lifted, balanced lower face most patients arrive wanting — and rarely get from any single treatment.

If your budget or timeline only allows one zone today, Kelly will tell you which one will move the needle most for your specific anatomy. Often it’s the cheek, even when you arrived asking about the jaw.

1 mL vs. 2 mL vs. 3–4 mL — how many syringes for the jawline?

Most jawline patients need 2 to 4 syringes. Female protocols often start at 2 mL; male jawlines typically run 3–5. One syringe is a refinement, not a structural change. More than 4 in a single session is usually a staging mistake — split it across two visits.

defined jawline facial contour miami beach
That’s the headline. The full reasoning: the jawline is a larger anatomical surface than the cheek, so meaningfully more syringes are needed for visible structural definition. The right number for your face depends on starting anatomy, how much definition you want, and whether you’re aiming for female contouring or male squareness.
  • 1 syringe (1 mL) total: A subtle refinement. Appropriate for patients with strong existing bone structure who want a small enhancement in one specific zone (often the pre-jowl sulcus or chin transition). Will not produce a dramatic jawline change visible from across the room. Best as a first-time entry point or as a maintenance touch-up.
  • 2 syringes (2 mL) total: The most common female jawline starting point. Provides meaningful definition along the mandibular border with modest gonial angle and pre-jowl work. Visible, photographable change — but not a dramatic transformation. The right starting point for most first-time female jawline patients.
  • 3 syringes (3 mL) total: Full female jawline structural definition or a starting male protocol. Allows all four sub-zones to be addressed at meaningful proportion. The right answer for patients with significant volume loss or those wanting a strong, sharply defined contour.
  • 4 syringes (4 mL) total: Comprehensive jawline restructuring. Common for male jawlines, for patients with significant mandibular volume loss, or for patients building a strong jawline with no existing bony definition. Sometimes staged across two sessions rather than placed in one visit.
  • 5+ syringes total in a single visit: Rarely the right answer. The mandible has structural limits to what it can integrate at once. Overshooting them produces the “wider face” and migration patients describe online. Splitting a large plan across two sessions 6–8 weeks apart is the discipline that protects the result.
The conservative approach is to dose for the result you want at the lower end of the range, see how the face settles at two weeks, and add at a follow-up if needed. That’s how a jawline stays believable and earns its definition rather than announcing itself.
An honest conversation

"Wider face," migration, and other jawline filler problems — how we avoid them.

If you’ve researched jawline filler, you’ve seen the before-and-afters that didn’t go right. Faces that look wider, not more defined. Lumps palpable along the jaw. Filler that has migrated toward the neck over time. The most-searched concern is whether jawline filler will make your face “wider” — and the answer is: only when it’s done badly. Nearly every poor outcome we have seen, and corrected, traces back to one of four injector errors:
  • Overdosing at the gonial angle. The most common cause of the “wider face” complaint. When too much product is concentrated at the corner of the jaw — especially in patients whose anatomy doesn’t support that placement — the lower face widens rather than sharpens. The right answer is conservative gonial-angle dosing balanced with anterior mandibular work to create lengthening rather than widening.
  • Superficial placement. Jawline filler belongs in the deep supra-periosteal plane against the bone — where it is structurally supported and where it cannot migrate. Placement too superficially produces palpable lumps, visible product over time, and migration downward toward the neck.
  • Treating the jaw without the cheek. When a patient has significant mid-face volume loss, treating the jaw alone makes the imbalance worse — the lower face becomes more prominent against a deflated upper face, often reading as “bottom-heavy.” Combined cheek and jawline work prevents this.
  • Wrong product for the anatomy. Soft HA fillers (the kind appropriate for lips and tear troughs) are wrong for the jawline. They don’t hold structural shape against gravity and they migrate. The right products are firmer — Radiesse, Voluma, or Lyft.
How we approach this differently. Jawline filler at South Florida Face and Body is mapped to your specific mandibular anatomy across the four sub-zones, placed in the correct deep plane (often with a blunt-tip microcannula for safety), dosed conservatively per session, and stages across multiple visits when volume needs are significant. If you have prior jawline filler that has migrated or accumulated, the conversation often starts with dissolving — not adding. Restraint is the most important discipline a jawline injector can bring.
Jawline filler in Miami Beach — published pricing

What jawline filler actually costs at South Florida Face and Body.

Most Miami Beach practices won’t publish a jawline filler price. We do, because patients deserve to know what they’re walking into before they sit down. The ranges below reflect what Kelly actually charges as of 2026. Your written quote at consultation reflects your specific plan.

Radiesse · per syringe

$800–$1,100

Per 1.5 mL syringe. The structural workhorse for the jawline.

HA filler · per syringe

$800–$1,200

Juvéderm Voluma and Restylane Lyft. Reversible with hyaluronidase.

Typical session range

$1,600–$4,800

2–4 syringes total. Male protocols often higher (3–5 syringes).

What you pay for. Per-syringe pricing means your invoice reflects exactly what was opened and placed. No per-zone surcharge, no opaque “treatment package,” no upcharge for cannula versus needle. If three syringes accomplish what we planned with four, you pay for three.

How Miami Beach compares to the national average. Miami Beach jawline filler pricing runs roughly 10–20% above the national average, reflecting overhead realities. Quotes meaningfully above the ranges published here usually reflect Brickell or Bal Harbour rent — not better outcomes.

The neighborhoods we treat from South of Fifth.

South Florida Face and Body sits in Suite 414 at 1000 5th Street, at the southern tip of Miami Beach. From SoFi, Kelly draws jawline filler patients across the barrier islands, across the causeway to mainland Miami, and from as far south as Key Biscayne. Many male patients in particular travel from Brickell finance and Wynwood creative offices specifically for the male jawline protocol.

How patients reach us

SoFi is one of the most accessible aesthetic locations in the city — close to the MacArthur Causeway for Brickell, Downtown, and Key Biscayne patients, and a clear straight shot up Collins or Indian Creek for Mid-Beach, Surfside, and Bal Harbour. Jawline patients especially appreciate the discreet office location — the practice doesn’t have a street-level “med-spa” presence, which matters for executive and male patients who prefer privacy.

1000 5th Street, Suite 414 · Miami Beach, FL 33139

Drive times from where our jawline filler patients live & work

South of Fifth (SoFi)
WALK
Sunset Harbour
5 Min
South Beach core
5 Min
Brickell
9 Min
Mid-Beach / Faena District
10 Min
Downtown Miami
11 Min
Edgewater / Wynwood
13 Min
Coconut Grove
18 Min
Surfside
17 Min
Bal Harbour
19 Min
Key Biscayne
21 Min
Sunny Isles Beach
23 Min

Geography genuinely matters in jawline filler planning. A Brickell finance patient who lives in a suit and presents in conference rooms has a different aesthetic target than a Wynwood creative-industry patient with a more relaxed daily presence. A Bal Harbour patient who returns to the boardroom or a yacht has different recovery-window constraints than a Sunset Harbour patient with a flexible schedule. Kelly factors that lifestyle reality into your product choice, your syringe staging, and the timing of your appointment — not just the anatomy at rest.

Your jawline filler appointment, step by step.

A jawline filler appointment runs 45–75 minutes depending on syringe count. The actual injection is 20–35 minutes. The rest is reading your face from multiple angles, mapping sub-zones, photographs, and the careful conversation about what's reasonable.

  1. Consultation & treatment-history review. Kelly reviews your past fillers, any prior dissatisfaction, current concerns, and your aesthetic goals in your own words. For jawline work in particular, the conversation about gendered aesthetic targets matters — a male patient seeking masculine definition gets a different protocol from a female patient seeking softer contouring.
  2. Sub-zone mapping in profile and three-quarter. Jawline work demands photographs from multiple angles — front, both three-quarters, and full profile. Kelly marks which of the four sub-zones have lost definition, the proportion across each, asymmetry between sides, and how the jaw reads in motion (smiling, talking). She shows you on a mirror or photograph exactly where syringes will be placed.
  3. Product selection. Based on your anatomy, your timeline, your reversibility preference, and your budget, Kelly picks between Radiesse, Juvéderm Voluma, Restylane Lyft, or a combination. The reasoning is explained out loud — you should understand why this product over the others, and why this product for your jaw specifically.
  4. Written treatment plan + per-syringe pricing. The plan is on paper before any product is opened. You see exactly which sub-zones are being treated, how many syringes, and what the session costs. Your invoice matches — never exceeds — that quote.
  5. Topical numbing + microcannula prep. 20–25 minutes of topical anesthetic. For multi-syringe jawline work, Kelly uses a blunt-tip microcannula, which dramatically reduces bruising and vascular risk compared with a sharp needle. The cannula approach also gives Kelly better tactile feedback along the bony mandibular border.
  6. Injection. Slow, layered placement at the correct deep supra-periosteal plane against the mandible. Pause-and-assess between syringes, never packed in a rush. Conservative dosing per session — the discipline that prevents the overfilled, wider-face look.
  7. Aftercare brief. No strenuous exercise, saunas, or pressure on treated areas for 24–48 hours. Cold compresses for the first night. No salt-heavy meals or alcohol the first day to minimize swelling. You’ll leave with Kelly’s direct contact for any post-treatment questions.
  8. Two-week settle check. Photographs from the same multi-angle setup as the consultation. Assessment of the final result once swelling is fully resolved. If a touch-up makes sense, it happens here — not on day 1, never in a rush.

Why Miami Beach patients switch to Kelly jawline filler.

Patients arrive at South Florida Face and Body from across Miami-Dade for a particular kind of injection experience — one where jawline filler is treated as an anatomical decision rooted in your specific mandible, not a syringe count tied to a promotional package. In a city where most filler practices treat the jawline the same way they treat the cheek (and most male patients the same way they treat female patients), the difference is direct, personal, and consistent care from the same provider every visit.

Kelly Wolfe is a Florida-licensed Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN #11005134) and board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP-BC), credentialed by the American Nurses Credentialing Center. She holds a Master of Science in Nursing from the University of Miami, plus a Master’s in Biochemistry from Missouri State University. That biochemistry background matters for jawline work in ways patients don’t always realize — the chemistry of HA cross-linking that explains why Voluma is firmer than other HA products, the structural mechanics of calcium hydroxylapatite scaffolding against bone, the physiology of fibroblast response that makes Radiesse’s collagen build durable. These are the conversations she actually has at consultation, not pamphlet-level summaries. She is also a Certified Functional Medicine Practitioner.

And she owns the practice. The person you book with is the person who treats you — every visit, start to finish. For male patients in particular, that continuity matters: the protocol that worked at session one is executed by the same hands at session two and beyond, without the variability that comes from being passed between providers in larger med-spa operations.

About Your Injector

Kelly Wolfe, MSN, APRN, FNP-BC

Kelly is the owner of South Florida Face and Body. A board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner trained at the University of Miami, she holds advanced degrees in nursing, biochemistry, and biology, with graduate research focused on metabolism and the role of leptin and appetite-suppressing hormones. She practices at the intersection of functional medicine and aesthetic injection — meaning the conversations in her treatment room often go beyond the syringe to consider sleep, hormones, metabolism, and inflammation as part of how your skin and face actually present.

Licensed as an Advanced Practice Registered Nurse in the State of Florida (APRN #11005134), Kelly brings more than three decades of experience in health, fitness, and clinical practice. She has performed aesthetic injections in South Florida for over a decade and has trained alongside the dermatology and plastic surgery community that built Miami’s aesthetic reputation.

She is the one who answers your text message. She is the one who calls the day after your injection.

From your first consultation through every follow-up, you’ll work directly with Kelly — one injector, one set of hands, one consistent plan.

Education, Training & Credentials

Education & Training

Master of Science in Nursing (FNP), APRN

University of Miami

Advanced practice registered nursing with a focus on family health and primary care.

Master of Science in Biochemistry

Missouri State University

Research focused on metabolism and the role of leptin and appetite-suppressing hormones.

Bachelor of Science in Biology

Missouri State University

Research with a strong foundation in human physiology, cellular biology, and biochemistry.

Board Certifications & Licensure

Board-Certified Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP-BC)

American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC)

National certification in family practice and primary care.

Licensed Advanced Practice Registered Nurse (APRN)

State of Florida License #APRN11005134

Authorized to diagnose, treat, and prescribe medications in the State of Florida.

Certified Functional Medicine Practitioner (CFMP)

Elite NP

Advanced training in root-cause diagnostics, hormone optimization, metabolic health, and integrative wellness.

Certified Fitness & Nutrition Trainer

30+ Years of Experience

Over 30 years helping clients achieve sustainable health and wellness transformations.

Patient Voices

See what our patients are saying.

5.0

54 Google reviews

"Kelly is amazing! She's incredibly knowledgeable and progressive when it comes to facial aesthetics. My Botox and filler results are natural, refreshed, and exactly what I was hoping for — never overdone."

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Kateryna E. Google Review

"Kelly is the best! She truly listens to what her clients want and delivers exactly what you picture. My results are always natural and beautiful. I couldn't recommend her more!"

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Sierra B. Google Review

"I was on holiday in Miami and got the details for Kelly. Best Botox I have had. She advised my husband who had very sore facial skin with a new routine and has cleared up the problem. Would certainly recommend."

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D GW Google Review

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions from Miami Beach patients considering chin filler. If yours isn't covered here, Kelly is happy to answer directly — text or call.

How much does jawline filler cost in Miami Beach?

Jawline filler in Miami Beach runs $800 to $1,200 per syringe depending on the product. Radiesse for structural jawline work runs $800–$1,100 per 1.5 mL syringe. Juvéderm Voluma sits at the higher end ($950–$1,200). Restylane Lyft sits in the mid-range ($800–$1,000). Most patients use 2–4 syringes, putting a session between $1,600 and $4,800. Male protocols often use 3–5 syringes ($2,400–$6,000+).

At South Florida Face and Body, every quote is in writing per syringe before any injection.

HA fillers like Juvéderm Voluma and Restylane Lyft last 12 to 18 months at the jawline. Radiesse — calcium hydroxylapatite — also lasts 12 to 18 months but with continued collagen benefit beyond the gel’s resorption, often making the structural result appear to hold meaningfully longer.

Most patients schedule a maintenance touch-up annually, with full structural redosing every 18 months. Active Miami Beach lifestyles — outdoor training, sun exposure — can shorten duration slightly.

Most jawline patients need 2 to 4 syringes for meaningful structural definition:

1 syringe: Subtle refinement for patients with strong existing bone structure.
2 syringes: Most common female starting point. Visible, photographable change.
3 syringes: Full female jawline structural definition or starting male protocol.
4 syringes: Comprehensive restructuring. Common for male jawlines or significant volume loss.
5+ syringes: Rarely the right answer in one visit — staged across two sessions instead.

Kelly writes the exact syringe plan at consultation. Full breakdown above.

For most structural jawline work, Radiesse is the workhorse — its calcium hydroxylapatite scaffolding provides firm definition along the mandibular border and stimulates collagen for a more durable result. It’s also more migration-resistant than HA.

For patients who prefer the reversibility of HA (in case adjustment is wanted), Juvéderm Voluma offers strong structural support with the option to dissolve with hyaluronidase.

Restylane Lyft is a reliable softer alternative, often chosen for the pre-jowl sulcus specifically where smoothness matters more than sharp definition.

Kelly chooses based on your anatomy, your reversibility preference, and your goal. See the product breakdown above.

Properly placed jawline filler does not make your face look wider — it defines and lengthens the lower face along the mandibular border, which is generally perceived as more contoured, not wider.

The “wider face” result occurs when filler is placed too laterally at the gonial angle in patients whose anatomy doesn’t support that placement, or when too much volume is concentrated in one zone. Conservative dosing across the full mandibular border, with attention to anterior projection and not just lateral angle, produces a more defined, sculpted look. Read more about how we avoid this above.

Jawline filler can migrate when too much product is placed too superficially, or when product is placed in the wrong tissue plane. Properly placed jawline filler in the deep supra-periosteal plane along the mandibular border is structurally supported by the bone itself and does not migrate meaningfully.

Radiesse — calcium hydroxylapatite — has a lower migration risk than HA because of its firmer particle structure. If you have prior filler that has migrated, hyaluronidase can dissolve HA filler and reset the area before new placement.

Yes — and the male jawline is one of the highest-impact, most-requested non-surgical procedures for men in Miami. Male jawline filler differs from female jawline filler in three important ways:

Men typically benefit from more emphasis at the gonial angle for a squarer look, broader anterior mandibular projection for a stronger chin transition, and higher overall syringe count (often 3–5 syringes vs 2–3 for women).

Kelly has a dedicated male jawline approach — different protocol, different aesthetic target, same conservative dosing discipline. Read the full male jawline section above.

Yes, often. Restoring volume along the pre-jowl sulcus — the depression just in front of the jowl — can dramatically soften the apparent jowl by creating a smoother transition between the jaw and the lower face.

However, severe jowls driven by deeper structural changes often need a combined approach: jawline filler plus cheek filler to address the mid-face support that originally collapsed and let the jowl form. Kelly will tell you at consultation whether jawline alone is enough or whether a combined plan is needed. Read more about the cheek-jaw-chin lift triangle above.

In most cases the answer is both — the chin and jawline are anatomically continuous, and treating one without the other usually produces an unnatural transition. The pre-jowl sulcus connects directly to the chin and mandibular projection, so a treatment plan typically addresses the full mandibular contour rather than isolating one zone.

Kelly maps your specific anatomy and writes a single combined plan rather than separate treatments. For deeper detail on chin work specifically, see our chin filler page.

Most jawline fillers are formulated with lidocaine, and Kelly applies topical anesthetic before the procedure. The injection itself is most often described as pressure rather than sharp pain. For multi-syringe jawline work, Kelly typically uses a blunt-tip microcannula instead of a sharp needle, which dramatically reduces bruising risk and discomfort. Most patients tolerate jawline filler very comfortably.

Most patients return to normal activity the same day. Mild swelling and tenderness are expected for 24–72 hours; bruising, if any, resolves within 5–7 days. Avoid strenuous exercise, saunas, and direct sun for 24–48 hours, and avoid pressure on the treated area the first night.

Most patients are comfortable in public by day 2–3 and fully recovered by day 7.

Most healthy adults with weak or undefined jawlines, mandibular volume loss, jowl formation, or interest in non-surgical jawline definition are good candidates. Jawline filler works particularly well for patients with reasonable underlying bone structure who want enhancement, less well for patients with severely deficient mandibular bone — those patients are sometimes better served by a chin implant or other surgical option, which Kelly will tell you honestly.

You are not a candidate if you are pregnant or breastfeeding, have an active skin infection at the planned injection site, have a known hypersensitivity to filler components or lidocaine, or have a history of severe allergic reactions. Disclose your full medical history at consultation.

Yes — and often should be. Jawline filler combines naturally with cheek filler for full lower-face lift, with masseter Botox for patients who clench or grind (masseter reduction creates a slimmer lateral jaw that the filler then redefines along the bone), and with chin filler for full mandibular continuity. Sequencing matters — Kelly will plan the order at consultation based on what you want to settle when.

1000 5th Street, Suite 414, Miami Beach, FL 33139 — in the South of Fifth (SoFi) district at the southern tip of Miami Beach. We’re 8 minutes from Brickell, 10 from Mid-Beach, 19 from Bal Harbour. $4/hr in the attached garage; free street parking is available around the building during business hours (one nearby zone is metered). Phone: (786) 529-1860. Hours: Monday–Friday 10am–6pm, Saturday 10am–2pm.