DATA-BACKED GUIDE · UPDATED JULY 2026
How much does a HydraFacial cost in the UK?
HydraFacial is a branded medical-grade facial that has become the classic clinic upsell, tacked on after another treatment or sold as a monthly habit. The base session has a from-price, but the boosters and longer versions are where the cost climbs. Here is what actually sits behind the number.
The quick version
- HydraFacial is priced per session, with longer versions and booster serums adding to the base price.
- The from-price usually reflects the shortest express version, not the full treatment with add-ons.
- It is often sold as a course or a monthly subscription, which changes the total you commit to.
- Because it is a branded treatment, prices still vary a lot between clinics with no set rate.
- It is a low-risk facial, but you are paying a premium for the brand, so compare what you actually get.
What people actually paid
The gap: advertised vs actually paid (medians)
People reported paying 14% more than the advertised list price for hydrafacial.
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
- £100“They are about £100 a go where I live”
- £120“Costs about £120 at the clinic I go to, have about 2/3 a year, completely worth every penny”
- £120“Costs about £120 at the clinic I go to, have about 2/3 a year”
Genuine amounts posted publicly. We publish the price and the quote, never the person.
Why the price varies so much
Cost depends on session length and boosters more than anything. An express cleanse is cheaper than a full treatment with lymphatic drainage, LED and targeted serums stacked on. The brand itself commands a premium, and clinics in prime locations charge accordingly. Whether you buy one session, a course or a subscription changes the effective price too. As with the rest of UK aesthetics, there is no fixed rate, so the same named facial ranges widely from clinic to clinic.
How to pay less
- Check whether the from-price is an express version and what the full-length session costs before booking.
- Ask which boosters are included and which are extra, since add-on serums are where the price climbs.
- Compare a single session against a course or subscription, and only commit if you genuinely want it monthly.
- Weigh a HydraFacial against a good clinic facial or a HydraFacial-style treatment, as the brand carries a premium.
- Decline same-day booster upgrades pushed in the chair unless you planned them.
- Book it on its own merits rather than as an add-on after another treatment, where it is easy to say yes without thinking.
Common questions
Why does a HydraFacial cost more than a normal facial?
You are paying for a branded medical-grade device and its serums, plus the clinic setting. A standard facial can cost less, though the HydraFacial has a specific multi-step process. Whether the premium is worth it depends on how much you value the brand and result.
What makes one HydraFacial quote higher than another?
Session length and boosters. An express version is the cheapest, while a full treatment with add-on serums, LED or drainage costs more. Ask exactly what the quoted price includes, because from-prices often mean the shortest option.
Is a monthly HydraFacial subscription good value?
It can lower the per-session price if you genuinely want one every month. But committing to a subscription for a treatment you might have occasionally is how the total creeps up. Only sign up if it matches how often you would realistically go.
Is a HydraFacial worth it over other skin treatments?
It is a gentle, no-downtime option, unlike microneedling or a chemical peel which work deeper. If you want a hydrating glow it fits, but for scarring or lines a stronger treatment may give more per pound. Match the treatment to your actual goal.