How radiofrequency microneedling (Morpheus8, Potenza, Virtue RF) differs from traditional microneedling, what each is best for, cost comparison, and how to decide.
· By MedSpot Editorial · 3 min read
#skincare · #microneedling · #rf · #guide
If you've been researching skin tightening or scarring treatments, you've probably encountered both "microneedling" and "RF microneedling" — sometimes presented as if they're interchangeable. They're not. Here's how to tell them apart and decide which is appropriate for you.
Standard microneedling (also called collagen induction therapy, CIT) uses a device with fine needles to create controlled micro-injuries in the skin. These micro-channels stimulate the body's natural wound-healing response, producing new collagen and elastin over the following weeks.
Best suited for:
Recovery: 24–72 hours of redness and minor swelling; peeling is possible. Most patients are social-presentable within 48 hours.
Cost: $200–$700 per session; 3–6 sessions recommended for scarring.
RF microneedling devices (Morpheus8, Potenza, Virtue RF, Endymed Intensif, and others) combine the needle array with radiofrequency energy delivered at the tip of each needle. This does two things that traditional microneedling doesn't:
Morpheus8 specifically uses a fractionated RF array with adjustable depth (up to 8 mm) and is FDA-cleared for subdermal adipose remodeling — meaning it can address mild jowling, neck laxity, and body areas in addition to the face.
| Factor | Traditional microneedling | RF microneedling |
|---|---|---|
| Collagen stimulation | Yes (surface–mid dermis) | Yes (mid dermis to deep dermis/fat) |
| Skin tightening | Mild | Moderate to significant |
| Acne scarring | Good | Good to excellent |
| Loose skin / laxity | Limited | Better; approaches surgical results in mild cases |
| Body use (arms, abdomen) | Limited | Effective (with appropriate RF device) |
| Recovery | 24–72 hours | 2–5 days (more swelling; possible pinpoint bleeding) |
| Cost per session | $200–$700 | $700–$2,000 |
| Sessions needed | 3–6 | 1–3 |
A full course of traditional microneedling (5 sessions) might cost $1,500–$2,500. A full course of RF microneedling (2–3 sessions) might cost $2,000–$4,500. Per-session, RF costs more; per-full-treatment-course, the gap narrows.
If your primary goal is acne scarring and budget is a consideration, traditional microneedling with a quality serum (hyaluronic acid, growth factors) is often the better value. If you have loose skin, jowling, or want a surgical-adjacent outcome without surgery, RF microneedling justifies the premium.
Both traditional and RF microneedling are generally safer for darker skin types than lasers, since the injury mechanism doesn't rely on melanin targeting. However:
A good provider will give you an honest comparison and may even recommend starting with traditional microneedling before committing to a pricier RF course.
Looking for a clinic that offers microneedling or RF microneedling near you? Find vetted skincare providers on MedSpot →