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Botox dosing is measured in units, but there is no single universal number that fits every face. The correct dose depends on muscle strength, facial width, sex, age, wrinkle depth, prior toxin history, and how natural or still the patient wants the result to look.
That is why any unit chart should be understood as a clinical range, not a promise. A consultation is what turns a general guide into a safe personalized plan.
Common reference ranges include roughly 10-30 units for the forehead, 15-25 units for the glabella, 8-16 units per side for crow’s feet, and 25-50 units per side for the masseter. Smaller applications such as lip flip or gummy smile usually use much lower numbers.
Neck bands and underarm sweating treatments often require broader dosing because the treated surface area and target anatomy are larger.
Men often need more units than women because facial muscles are commonly stronger and the treatment area may be wider. Patients with deep dynamic lines or thick skin may also need higher dosing, while first-time patients or those asking for a softer result may start more conservatively.
The goal is not to inject the highest number possible. The goal is to use the lowest effective dose that achieves the planned outcome without creating an unnatural result.
Dr. Gemici: A Botox unit chart is a starting point, not a treatment plan. I set the dose only after watching facial movement, analyzing anatomy, and understanding how much expression the patient wants to keep.
Baby Botox usually means using a reduced dose, often around half to two-thirds of a standard plan, to preserve more movement. It is popular among younger patients and anyone who wants a softer effect.
Patients should also remember that units are not directly interchangeable across brands. Botox, Dysport, and Xeomin do not always convert one-to-one, so numbers must be interpreted within the brand being used.
A safe Botox plan depends on authentic product, correct reconstitution, good injection depth, and an honest explanation of expected movement after treatment. A larger number of units does not automatically mean a better or longer result.
For that reason, patients should judge treatment quality by facial balance, predictability, and follow-up, not by marketing around the highest dose.
A common reference range is about 10-30 units, but the correct number depends on muscle strength, forehead height, and how much movement you want to keep.
Often yes. Stronger facial muscles and broader treatment areas commonly increase the unit requirement.
No. Brand conversion is not one-to-one, so unit numbers should always be interpreted within the specific product being used.

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.