- Is upper blepharoplasty covered by insurance?
- It may be when it is functionally indicated — meaning excess upper-lid skin obstructs the superior visual field, documented with a visual-field test and photographs. Purely cosmetic upper blepharoplasty is paid out of pocket. Note: when blepharoplasty is performed at the same time as ptosis repair, the blepharoplasty (skin) portion is always considered cosmetic and is not covered by insurance.
- What is the difference between upper blepharoplasty and ptosis repair?
- Upper blepharoplasty removes excess eyelid skin. Ptosis repair raises a low eyelid margin caused by weakness or stretching of the levator muscle. They address different problems and are sometimes performed together.
- Where is the incision and will it scar?
- The incision is placed within the natural upper-lid crease, so it heals to a nearly invisible line hidden in the fold of the lid.
- How long is recovery after upper blepharoplasty?
- Bruising and swelling peak around 48 hours and settle over 1–2 weeks; most patients are presentable by 10–14 days, with the final result stable by about 3 months.
- Will upper blepharoplasty remove my forehead lines or crow's feet?
- No — blepharoplasty addresses excess eyelid skin and fat. Forehead lines, brow position, and crow's feet are treated separately (brow lift, neuromodulators, or skin resurfacing), sometimes during the same visit.
- How long do the results last?
- Results are long-lasting — typically 10 years or more, and for many patients essentially permanent. The eyelids keep aging slowly, but the skin that was removed does not grow back.