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Drooping brows can make the face look tired, heavy, or older than it feels. In clinic, two of the most commonly discussed non-surgical options are the Botox brow lift and the thread lift.
Both aim to elevate the brow area, but they work very differently. The right choice depends on how severe the brow descent is, whether the goal is a subtle refresh or a stronger shape change, and how much downtime the patient accepts.
Brow descent is not caused by one factor alone. Aging skin loses collagen and elasticity, soft tissue support weakens, and gravity gradually pulls the upper face downward.
In some patients the issue is mainly muscle balance, while in others skin laxity and structural support loss play a larger role. That difference is what separates a good Botox candidate from a better thread-lift candidate.
A Botox brow lift works by relaxing selected muscles that pull the brow downward, allowing the frontalis muscle to lift a little more freely. It is the simpler and less invasive option.
The result is usually subtle rather than dramatic. For mild brow heaviness, especially when forehead lines or frown lines are also part of the complaint, Botox can be a very elegant first step.
A brow thread lift uses lifting threads placed under the skin to reposition tissue more directly. It can create a stronger mechanical lift and can influence brow shape more than Botox alone.
This makes it more attractive for patients with heavier brows, more visible descent, or those who want a longer-lasting result. The tradeoff is that it is more invasive, requires more technical precision, and comes with downtime, swelling, or bruising.
Dr. Gemici: The real question is not which brow-lift treatment is more popular, but which mechanism is causing the brow to look low. Botox is excellent for selected mild cases; threads are more useful when tissue descent is stronger.
Botox usually starts to show effect within several days and is assessed properly around two weeks. Most patients return to normal activity immediately. Its lower upfront cost is balanced by the need for repeated sessions.
Thread lifting creates an immediate lifting effect, although the final look becomes clearer once swelling settles. Recovery is longer and the starting cost is higher, but the result usually lasts longer than Botox in the right patient.
Botox often suits younger patients with early brow descent, patients who want a conservative lift, or those who are trying brow rejuvenation for the first time.
Thread lift is more logical when descent is more pronounced, when brow shape change matters, or when the patient wants a longer-lasting result and accepts more recovery. In selected cases, combining both approaches can make sense.
Usually the lift is subtle. In the right patient it can make the brow look more open and rested, but it does not replace a stronger lifting procedure when brow descent is significant.
In most cases, yes. Botox is temporary and usually repeated every few months, while a thread lift can last longer depending on tissue quality, technique, and patient factors.
Yes. In selected patients, threads can provide structural lift while Botox helps reduce downward pull and refine the final brow position.

Trusted & Professional
Dr. Hamza Gemici is a medical aesthetic physician based in Ataşehir, Istanbul. His practice focuses on natural anti-aging and subtle facial harmonization using botulinum toxin, dermal fillers, periocular rejuvenation and skin quality procedures. All treatments are performed with FDA-approved products under physician-guided protocols.