DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026
How much do lip fillers cost in the UK?
Lip fillers are one of the most searched and most wildly priced treatments in UK aesthetics. A half-syringe teaser rate looks tempting until you learn most people want a full one, and the difference is not loose change. Here is what drives the cost and how to avoid the classic in-the-chair upsell.
The quick version
- Lip fillers are priced per syringe, usually 0.5ml or 1ml, so a very low headline price often means the smaller half-syringe.
- The advertised from-price rarely matches what you pay once the practitioner recommends a full syringe or a top-up.
- Who injects matters, since a nurse-led medical clinic and a salon can charge very differently for the same lips.
- Lip filler is barely regulated on price, so shopping the quote around genuinely saves money here.
- Lip filler is a cosmetic procedure with real risks including vascular complications, so a qualified insured injector is not the place to cut corners.
What people actually paid
The gap: advertised vs actually paid (medians)
People reported paying 9% less than the advertised list price for lip fillers.
List prices are advertised prices; paid figures are what people reported, often for different cases. Treat the gap as a signal, not a quote.
Real prices, in people's own words
- £200“I paid £200”
- £250“The treatment... costs £250 for 1ml of filler”
- £350“I paid £350 for 1ml of filler at a reputable London clinic”
Genuine amounts posted publicly. We publish the price and the quote, never the person.
Why the price varies so much
The spread on lip fillers comes down to volume, brand and hand. Half a syringe naturally costs less than a full one, and premium hyaluronic acid brands cost the clinic more, which lands on your bill. A doctor or aesthetics nurse charges more than a lightly trained beautician, and city-centre rents inflate everything. Because there is no set price for aesthetics in the UK, two clinics on the same street can quote figures that are miles apart for identical work.
How to pay less
- Confirm whether the quote is for 0.5ml or 1ml before booking, because comparing a half against a full syringe is comparing two different treatments.
- Ask if a two-week review and small top-up is included in the price, since many natural results need a little more.
- Check the injector on the Save Face register for a qualified insured practitioner rather than chasing the cheapest deal.
- Choose a nurse-led or doctor-led clinic over a high-street salon if the salon rate looks too good to be true.
- Turn down same-day upgrades to a full syringe unless you planned it, and never accept a dermal fillers package bolted on in the chair.
- Avoid clinics that only quote a price after they have you in the room, as that is where the number climbs.
Common questions
Is a 0.5ml or 1ml syringe better value?
Neither is automatically better, it depends on the look you want. A half-syringe suits a subtle enhancement, a full one gives more volume. The trap is comparing a clinic's 0.5ml headline price against another's 1ml quote and thinking one is overcharging.
Why do lip filler prices vary so much between clinics?
Aesthetics has almost no price regulation in the UK, so clinics set their own fees based on the injector's qualifications, the filler brand and their rent. A nurse-led clinic in a city will rarely match a salon rate, and that gap usually reflects training and insurance.
Will I need a top-up, and does that cost extra?
Many people need a small top-up at the two-week review for an even result. Some clinics include it, others charge again. Ask before you book, because paying twice erases any saving from a cheap initial price.
How do I know an injector is safe?
Look them up on the Save Face register, which lists qualified insured practitioners. Lip filler carries real risks, so a medically trained injector who can manage a complication is worth more than a bargain. This is not medical advice, just common sense.