If you've never been to a med spa before, the landscape can feel overwhelming — a mix of spa services, medical treatments, and devices with unfamiliar names. Here's what you actually need to know before your first appointment.
What is a med spa?
A medical spa (med spa) combines the relaxing environment of a day spa with medical-grade aesthetic treatments that require professional training or a prescription. The defining difference from a regular spa: a licensed medical professional must be involved in treatments like Botox, dermal fillers, laser procedures, and medical-grade chemical peels.
Legitimate med spas operate under the supervision of a medical director — typically a physician (MD/DO) or, in some states, a nurse practitioner (NP) or physician assistant (PA). The medical director is responsible for the clinical protocols and oversight of all medical treatments.
What to expect at your first visit
The consultation
Most reputable med spas start with a consultation — either before or at the beginning of your first appointment. During a good consultation:
- The provider reviews your medical history and medications
- You describe your concerns (what bothers you, what you'd like to improve)
- The provider assesses your skin and anatomy
- A treatment plan is proposed
- You receive a realistic expectation of results, timeline, and cost
Red flag: A consultation that skips the medical history or jumps immediately to pricing and a list of treatments without assessing you individually.
The med spa vs. dermatologist question
Med spas and dermatologists serve overlapping but different needs:
Med spas are appropriate for:
- Cosmetic Botox, filler, and injectable treatments
- Laser treatments for cosmetic purposes (hair removal, skin rejuvenation)
- HydraFacials, chemical peels, microneedling
- Body contouring (CoolSculpting, Emsculpt)
- Skin care product guidance
See a dermatologist instead if you have:
- Suspicious moles, skin lesions, or changes that need evaluation
- Active acne that needs prescription management
- Rosacea, eczema, or psoriasis requiring diagnosis and treatment
- Anything that requires a proper skin disease evaluation
Common beginner treatments
These are the treatments most first-time patients try — lower-risk, no or minimal downtime:
HydraFacial
- Surface cleansing, extraction, and hydration
- Zero downtime; immediate glow
- Great starting point for anyone new to med spa treatments
- $150–$300
Preventive Botox (neuromodulator)
- Relaxes muscles causing dynamic lines (forehead, crow's feet, "11s")
- Best started in your 30s before lines become static
- 10–14 day onset; lasts 3–4 months
- $200–$600 depending on units and areas
Lip flip
- Small amount of Botox to allow the upper lip to evert slightly
- Quick, subtle, temporary (4–8 weeks)
- $50–$100
- Good "try before filler" option
Chemical peel (superficial)
- Glycolic or salicylic peel for texture and mild pigment
- Minimal to no downtime
- $75–$200
How to choose a provider
Credentials to look for:
- For Botox and filler: Injections should be performed by an MD, DO, NP, PA, or RN under medical direction (scope varies by state)
- For laser treatments: Ask about training specific to the device being used
- Medical director: Ask who the medical director is and whether they're on-site or remotely supervising
Portfolio review:
- Ask to see before/after photos for your specific treatment
- Photos should show healed results (2+ weeks post), not just immediate post-treatment
- Look for results on patients with similar anatomy or skin tone to yours
Reviews and referrals:
- Google and RealSelf reviews are useful signals
- A friend's referral who has gotten specific results you like is the highest-quality signal
Questions to ask at your first appointment
- Who will be performing my treatment, and what are their credentials?
- Who is the medical director, and are they available if I have a complication?
- For my concern, what is the most evidence-backed treatment option?
- What are the realistic results, and how long will they last?
- What is the total cost for the recommended course (not just per session)?
- What happens if I'm not happy with the result, and what is your correction/dissolving policy?
- What should I avoid before and after the treatment?
How to avoid being oversold
Med spas are businesses — some providers will recommend more treatments than necessary. Signs you're being oversold:
- Multiple treatments recommended at the first appointment without a clear explanation of why each is necessary
- "Package deals" pressure — you don't need to buy a package at your first visit
- Guaranteed dramatic results — legitimate providers give realistic expectations, not guarantees
- Dismissing your questions — a good provider welcomes questions and explains their reasoning
Baseline: one treatment at a time. Start with the single highest-priority treatment, see how you respond, and add more over time if you want.
Before your appointment: preparation checklist
General for most treatments:
- Arrive with clean skin (or plan for your makeup to be removed)
- Disclose all medications (including blood thinners, retinoids, supplements)
- Disclose any autoimmune conditions, history of cold sores, recent illnesses
- Avoid alcohol the day before (increases bruising)
For Botox/filler specifically:
- Avoid NSAIDs (ibuprofen, aspirin) and fish oil 5–7 days before (reduces bruising)
- Don't schedule right before an important event — allow 2 weeks for results to settle
For laser or chemical peel:
- Avoid sun tanning for 2–4 weeks before
- Disclose any retinoid use (may need to pause before treatment)
- Disclose Accutane history (many treatments require 12 months off Accutane)
After your first treatment: follow-up
A reputable med spa will:
- Give you written aftercare instructions specific to your treatment
- Provide a way to contact them if you have questions or concerns
- Offer a follow-up appointment or check-in at 2 weeks for injectable treatments
If your provider doesn't offer a 2-week follow-up for Botox or filler, ask for one — it's standard practice for assessing results and making any small corrections.
The realistic timeline for results
Immediate: HydraFacial, superficial peels
3–5 days: Initial Botox effect
2 weeks: Full Botox result; filler swelling resolved
1–3 months: Full results from collagen-stimulating treatments (microneedling, RF microneedling)
3–6 months: Full results from body contouring (CoolSculpting, Emsculpt)
6 months: Maximum PRP hair or skin results
Don't judge most treatments immediately. The healing and remodeling process takes time.
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