Lines that appear only when you smile or frown (dynamic wrinkles) are part of a living face. The goal isn’t to freeze them—it’s to soften lines that sit there at rest and keep your expression natural.
By Dr. Tim Neavin • Updated
Dynamic vs. static wrinkles
Dynamic wrinkles show up with animation—laughing, squinting, raising the brows. Static wrinkles are visible even at rest. We treat static lines more assertively and handle dynamic lines with lighter dosing so you keep your “barcode” of emotion.
How I use Botox® (and why balance matters)
- Target the right muscles: Relax overactive areas without shutting down expression entirely.
- Start conservative: Fine-tune at the two-week check rather than over-treat on day one.
- Match the map to your goals: Forehead, glabella, and crow’s feet are approached differently so brows still move and eyes still smile.
New to injectables? Read our overview of injectables for anti-aging to see how neuromodulators differ from fillers.
When volume—not wrinkles—is the issue
Faces often look “older” because of volume loss (temples, midface, lips). If that’s the case, adding structure back—sometimes with facial fat transfer or a small amount of filler—restores shape so fine lines matter less.
FAQ
Will Botox make me look frozen?
Not when it’s planned well. I dose to soften lines while preserving natural movement.
How long do results last?
About 3–4 months on average; some areas last longer. We adjust timing to your calendar and goals.
Can I combine Botox with other treatments?
Yes—skin quality work (retinoids, SPF, resurfacing) and small-volume support pair well with neuromodulators.
Next step: If you want fewer lines without losing expression, we’ll map a dosing plan that fits your face.