Men with larger or higher foreheads often have more visible horizontal lines — and may assume they need more Botox. The reality is often the opposite. Overtreating a large forehead is one of the most common mistakes providers make with male patients, resulting in a heavy, expressionless look. Here's how to get it right.
The Unique Challenge of Botox on Large Foreheads
The frontalis muscle spans the entire forehead and is responsible for raising the brows and creating horizontal wrinkles. In men with higher foreheads, this muscle has more vertical height to work with. The risk of aggressive treatment isn't just aesthetic — it's functional. Placing too many units too low on a large forehead drops the brows significantly, creating a heavy, tired look that's worse than the original wrinkles. Brow ptosis (drooping) is more common in men with large foreheads when overtreated.
How Many Units Does a Large Forehead Actually Need?
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Search by Zip Code →Counterintuitively, more surface area doesn't always mean more units. The goal is softening lines while preserving natural movement. Most skilled providers use 10-20 units on the forehead for most men, even those with large foreheads — placed strategically across more injection points at lower doses per point. This creates softer, diffuse relaxation rather than total paralysis. For large foreheads, fewer units placed higher (near the hairline) and more strategic placement in the middle zone usually produces the best result.
The danger zone for large forehead Botox: placing units too low, too close to the brows. This is what drops the brows. On a large forehead, keep treatment concentrated in the upper and middle thirds of the forehead, leaving the lower third largely untreated.
Working With Your Facial Proportions
The classical ideal of facial proportions divides the face into thirds: hairline to brow, brow to nose tip, nose tip to chin. Men with high foreheads already have a top-heavy proportional appearance. Overtreating the forehead with Botox — dropping the brows or flattening all movement — exaggerates this imbalance. A skilled provider may recommend treating with slightly more conservative dosing and focusing on the upper-middle forehead to preserve natural brow height and movement.
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Search by Zip Code →Signs Your Provider Is Getting It Wrong
Warning signs of overtreatment on a large forehead:
- •Eyebrows sitting noticeably lower than before treatment
- •Loss of nearly all forehead movement — you can't raise your brows at all
- •A 'heavy' or fatigued quality around the eyes
- •The forehead looks completely flat with no natural movement
- •People say you look tired or expressionless
The Conservative First Approach
For men with large foreheads getting Botox for the first time, less is genuinely more. A good provider will start at the lower end of the dosing range, wait 2 weeks to assess results, and offer a touch-up if needed. Starting conservative is far better than starting aggressive and waiting 3-4 months for an overtreated result to wear off. Ask your provider to start with fewer units than they might normally use and build from there.
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Search by Zip Code →Find providers who specialize in male facial anatomy at /find-botox-near-me — mention you have a large forehead and ask how they approach it. A good answer involves starting conservatively and preserving brow elevation.