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Facelift Claims in Scotland

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At HD Claims, we support people across Scotland who have been harmed by negligent facelift treatment. If you believe something went wrong with your cosmetic surgery, we can connect you with a suitable personal injury solicitor (regulated by the Law Society of Scotland) experienced in medical negligence claims, including those involving facelift surgery or rhytidectomy.

A facelift is usually carried out to reduce visible signs of ageing, especially around the jowls, jawline, and neck, by lifting and redraping facial skin and soft tissue. It is a delicate operation, and when proper standards are not followed before, during, or after surgery, the outcome can go far beyond disappointment and become a valid compensation claim.

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If your injuries or complications could have been avoided with competent treatment, you may be able to pursue a claim through a solicitor on a Speculative Fee Agreement (Scottish term for No Win No Fee). The purpose of a claim is not only to reflect pain, distress, and the wider impact on your life, but also to help recover financial losses such as loss of earnings, corrective treatment costs, travel expenses, and psychological support where appropriate.

This can apply where:

People often come to us at a difficult stage, sometimes while still dealing with pain, shock, or uncertainty about what went wrong. Our role is to listen, assess the circumstances of your case, and connect you with a suitable Scottish solicitor who can investigate what happened and advise whether you have grounds to proceed.

Important Medical Warning:

If you are experiencing serious symptoms after facelift surgery, your first priority should be getting medical attention, not starting a claim. Problems such as worsening swelling, severe pain, blackened or discoloured skin, heavy bleeding, signs of infection, sudden facial weakness or numbness, or any rapid change in your condition should be assessed as soon as possible.

If your symptoms are severe or getting worse, contact your surgeon, use an out-of-hours service, call NHS 24, or go to A&E. Once your condition has been assessed and you have the right medical support in place, you can then look at whether the complications may have been caused by negligent treatment and whether you may have grounds for a claim.

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What qualifies as a facelift negligence claim?

A facelift negligence claim is not based on the fact that you dislike the final look on its own. In Scotland, the key question is whether the care you received fell below the standard expected of reasonably competent medical professionals, and whether that failing caused you avoidable harm.
 
That matters because every facelift carries recognised risks, even when the procedure is carried out properly. A valid medical negligence claim usually depends on more than a poor cosmetic outcome. There must be evidence that something was done badly, not done when it should have been, or handled in a way that no reasonably competent practitioner should have accepted.

Examples of what may qualify include:

If another competent cosmetic surgeon would likely have acted differently, and that failure led to injury, the basis of a claim may be there. For example, a patient who was never properly warned about a serious risk and then suffers that exact complication may have grounds to investigate further.

By contrast, a claim is less likely to succeed where the surgeon used a reasonable approach, explained the risks properly, and the result falls within recognised complications that can happen despite appropriate care. That is why these cases often depend on the details of the records, the consent discussion, the aftercare notes, and expert opinion on what should have been done differently.

Medical errors that may occur during facelift surgery include:

When a facelift is performed below an acceptable standard, the harm is often more serious than an unsatisfactory appearance. Some of the most concerning complications seen in cosmetic surgery claims involve reduced blood supply, nerve injury, poor wound healing, and facial asymmetry.

Examples of serious errors and complications include:

A poor outcome may be made worse not only by the original mistake but also by delays in spotting and treating the complication properly.

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What is subperiosteal facelift negligence?

A subperiosteal facelift is a deeper and more invasive technique than many standard lifts. It involves lifting the soft tissue of the face away from the underlying facial bones before repositioning it, which is why it can carry a heavier recovery burden and more pronounced swelling.

Because this procedure works at a deeper plane, negligent treatment can have very specific consequences.

These may include:

This type of case often depends on whether the surgeon selected the right procedure for the patient in the first place, and whether the operation was carried out with proper care at that deeper anatomical level.

Thread Lift and Featherlift (Rhytidectomy) Errors

Thread lifts, sometimes called featherlifts, are marketed as less invasive than a traditional facelift. They usually use barbed or specially designed threads to lift tissue without removing large amounts of skin, often around the brow, midface, or jawline.

Although the procedure is less invasive, things can still go wrong if it is poorly planned or badly performed.

Common signs of possible negligence include:

If the threads are inserted at the wrong depth, under the wrong tension, or without proper symmetry, the result can look unnatural and may also be uncomfortable. Where that leaves you needing revision treatment, it may be worth getting tailored legal advice on whether you can claim compensation and estimate the value of your cosmetic negligence claim.

Making A Personal Injury Claim In Scotland

Our panel of experienced personal injury lawyers excel in handling cases against well-funded insurance companies.

Our specialised injury lawyers will assist you with your claim, keep you informed throughout the whole process, and provide you with legal advice that is easy to understand.

01

Get In Touch.

Tell us your story, we're here to listen and provide you with an initial assessment based on your circumstances.

02

We’ll Prepare Your Claim.

We'll be by your side to take care of the legal process. We'll keep you informed of every step of the way.

03

Receive Compensation.

If your claim is successful, we'll ensure that you get your compensation as soon as possible.

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The Psychological Impact of Botched Cosmetic Surgery

The emotional effect of botched cosmetic surgery can be far deeper than people expect. When the harm is to your face, it can affect how you feel every time you leave the house, look in the mirror, speak to other people, or see photos of yourself.

For many people, it is not just about being disappointed with the result. Facial deformity, uneven features, scars, or distortion of the hairline are visible alterations that can leave you feeling shocked, embarrassed, and emotionally uneasy. Some people start avoiding social situations, stop taking pictures, or lose confidence at work and in relationships.

It is also common to feel that other people do not fully understand the impact. Because cosmetic surgery is often seen as a personal choice, some patients feel judged or dismissed when something goes wrong. That can make the distress even harder to cope with.

Sometimes the emotional damage leads to anxiety, low mood, panic symptoms, or permanent loss of self-confidence. You may find yourself thinking constantly about what happened, worrying about how others see you, or feeling overwhelmed by the idea of further treatment.

This psychological harm can and should be taken seriously as part of a claim. If negligent treatment has caused serious emotional suffering, that harm is part of your case. It should be taken into account when looking at the full effect the surgery has had on your life.

If this has been affecting you emotionally, it can help to talk to your GP, a counsellor, or a therapist. That support matters for your wellbeing first, but it can also help create a clear record of what you have been going through if a solicitor later needs evidence of the emotional impact.

Evidence Needed to Prove Cosmetic Negligence

To prove cosmetic negligence, it is not enough to show that the result was upsetting or unexpected. What usually matters is having clear evidence of what your condition was before treatment, what happened during and after the procedure, and what harm you were left with as a result.

In facelift cases, photographs are often one of the most useful starting points. Clear before-and-after images can help show changes in facial symmetry, scarring, hairline position, skin loss, or other visible problems. It is best if the images are dated and taken at different stages, not just immediately after surgery, because some complications become more obvious as healing progresses.

Photographs on their own are rarely the whole picture, which is why the medical records matter so much. Your clinical notes from the surgeon, clinic, or hospital may show what procedure was planned, what risks were discussed, what happened during surgery, and how concerns were handled afterwards. Consent forms, operation notes, and follow-up records can all help build a clearer account of whether the care fell below a reasonable standard.

An independent medical expert is also important in most claims. They can review the records, assess the outcome, and give an opinion on whether the treatment was negligent and whether that negligence caused the injury. That expert evidence is often what turns a serious concern into a case that can be properly investigated.

If you have needed further treatment, keep records of that as well. Revision surgery recommendations, private consultations, prescriptions, invoices, and appointment letters can all help show the extent of the harm and what it may take to put matters right. Even if corrective treatment is only being discussed at this stage, written advice that it is needed can still be valuable evidence.

It also helps to keep a simple record of how the injury has affected you day to day. Notes about pain, swelling, sleep problems, time off work, emotional distress, or difficulties with normal routines can help show the full impact of the injury. Emails, text messages, and complaint responses from the clinic should be kept, too, because small details can become important once the full timeline is reviewed.

The strongest cases are usually built from several pieces of evidence working together rather than one document alone. When the photographs, records, expert opinion, and treatment history all point in the same direction, it becomes much easier for a solicitor to assess what went wrong and how the claim should be valued.

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Scottish Time Limits for Facelift Claims

In Scotland, facelift claims are usually subject to a strict three-year limitation period under the Prescription and Limitation (Scotland) Act 1973. In many cases, that three-year period starts on the date of the surgery itself. It can also begin later, from the “date of knowledge”, which means the point when you first realised, or could reasonably have realised, that the complication may have been caused by negligent treatment rather than a normal surgical risk.

That distinction matters in cosmetic surgery cases because some problems are not obvious straight away. A patient may initially be told that swelling, scarring, or nerve symptoms are part of recovery, only to find out later that the real issue was poor treatment or inadequate aftercare. In that situation, the time limit may start from when the link to negligence became clear, not simply from the procedure date.

If a claim cannot be resolved through negotiation and has to be litigated, it may proceed in the All-Scotland Sheriff Personal Injury Court, often referred to as ASPIC, which was established to deal with personal injury cases across Scotland.

Because limitation issues can become complicated very quickly, it is sensible to seek advice as early as possible rather than assume you still have time.

We also help people seeking guidance on related cosmetic treatment problems, including rhinoplasty, tummy tuck, skin or laser treatment, nose reshaping cases, and ear surgery negligence claims.

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