Education5 min readBy Trace Cohen|Last updated: 2026-05-27

Botox for Men Who Wear Glasses — Forehead Lines, Squinting & What to Know

Quick Answer

Men who wear glasses squint more, furrow their brows more, and often develop forehead and glabellar lines faster than those with corrected vision. Here's how Botox addresses glasses-driven wrinkles and what the injection process looks like when you wear frames.

If you've worn glasses since your teens or 20s, there's a good chance the lines on your face tell the story. Squinting to see clearly, furrowing your brows when your prescription slips, constantly raising your brows to adjust frames — these repetitive movements are written into your facial muscles over decades. Men who wear glasses consistently show deeper frown lines and forehead lines than those with corrected or no vision issues. Botox is one of the most effective tools for addressing this, but there are a few specific things to know if you're a glasses-wearer.

Why Glasses Users Get Deeper Lines Faster

The mechanism is simple: any time you squint — to see more clearly, to read fine print, to manage bright sunlight — you're contracting the muscles around your eyes and between your brows. Men with glasses or uncorrected vision problems do this constantly and involuntarily. Crow's feet (lines around the outer corners of the eyes) develop faster from habitual squinting. The '11s' (vertical frown lines between the brows) develop from sustained furrowing when trying to focus. Forehead lines develop partly from repeatedly raising the brows to lift glasses that slide down. All of these are driven by muscle movement — exactly what Botox addresses.

The Most Relevant Treatments for Glasses Wearers

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Treatments most relevant to glasses-related facial aging:

  • Frown lines (11s): The #1 priority for most glasses wearers — these vertical lines between the brows are directly caused by sustained furrowing while trying to see or concentrate
  • Crow's feet: Squinting-driven lines around the outer eyes; these often develop earlier and deeper in glasses wearers and respond very well to Botox
  • Forehead lines: Horizontal lines from repeatedly raising brows; more common in men whose glasses slide frequently or who look over frames
  • Brow position: If your brows have descended from years of facial tension and squinting, a small brow-lift effect from Botox can be valuable

If you've recently gotten LASIK or updated your prescription and stopped squinting, the muscle habits that created your lines are reducing — but the lines remain. Botox helps reverse the visible record of those years of squinting.

Does It Matter That You Wear Glasses During the Consultation?

Yes, actually — and a good provider will want to see how your glasses sit on your face. Where your frames rest on your nose, how they press into your temples, and whether they sit high or low on your face all affect where and how the provider will inject. Bring your glasses to the appointment. The provider should assess injection points while considering your frames, especially for the forehead — the goal is to treat lines above where your frames sit, and to avoid creating an overly static brow that looks odd without your glasses on.

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A Note on the Brow Position and Glasses

This is the subtle piece most men don't think about. Many glasses wearers unconsciously hold their brows in a slightly elevated position to keep their frames from sliding and to see clearly. Over years, the forehead muscles can become overactive in this compensatory position. If Botox fully relaxes these muscles, some men find the brow descends to its natural position, which can feel unfamiliar even if it looks perfectly fine to others. Your provider should assess your brow position before treating and discuss whether a light touch (to soften lines without changing brow position) or a fuller treatment is more appropriate for your anatomy.

Ready to address the lines from years of wearing glasses? Find a vetted provider near you at /find-botox-near-me — describe your concern clearly in your consultation and bring your glasses.

What About After the Treatment — Can You Wear Glasses Immediately?

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Yes. You can put your glasses back on immediately after Botox. The only general caution is avoiding pressing firmly on the injection sites for 4-6 hours — so don't wear glasses that press very tightly against your forehead injection sites right after treatment. Standard glasses worn normally are fine. The injection sites are healed within hours and normal eyewear pressure won't affect Botox placement.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will getting Botox around my eyes affect my vision?

No. Botox in the crow's feet area or upper face does not affect the eye itself or visual function. Extremely rare cases of eyelid drooping (ptosis) from forehead Botox affect the eyelid, not vision quality, and resolve on their own as the Botox wears off.

I got LASIK and stopped squinting — will my lines fade on their own now?

Dynamic lines (those that appear only when you make expressions) may soften somewhat as the muscle habit reduces. But static lines (those visible even without movement) are already set in the skin and will not self-correct. Botox can address both by relaxing the muscle and allowing the skin to soften.

My glasses rest on my forehead lines — does that change treatment?

A good provider will factor in your frame placement. The most important thing: bring your glasses to the appointment so they can see exactly where they sit on your face and plan accordingly.

Do contact lens wearers have the same squinting-related line issues?

Yes, particularly if the prescription is slightly off or contacts are worn past their recommended schedule. Men who've squinted with contacts for years develop the same line patterns as glasses wearers.

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