A sharp jawline can be undermined by a neck that looks older than the rest of your face. For men, the neck is one of the most aging features — and one of the most overlooked when it comes to Botox. Prominent vertical neck bands (called platysmal bands), horizontal neck lines, and a sagging jaw-neck angle all respond well to injectable treatments. Here's what actually works.
What Are Neck Bands?
Neck bands are the vertical rope-like cords that run down the neck from the jaw to the collarbone. They're caused by the platysma muscle — a broad, thin muscle that covers most of the front of the neck. As men age and lose facial fat, the platysma can become more prominent, creating visible bands especially when talking, laughing, or exercising. They're partly genetic, partly age-related, and partly related to muscle hyperactivity. Botox relaxes them effectively.
The Nefertiti Lift — Redefining the Jawline
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Search by Zip Code →The 'Nefertiti lift' is a Botox technique named for the Egyptian queen's sharply defined jawline. It involves injecting Botox along the lower jawline and into the upper platysma muscle bands. By relaxing the downward pull of the platysma, the upward-pulling muscles of the face (masseter, facial muscles) have less resistance, producing a subtle lift to the jawline and a sharper jaw-neck angle. For men who want a defined lower face without surgery, this is one of the most effective non-surgical options.
The Nefertiti lift works best for men with mild-to-moderate jaw-neck sagging. For advanced laxity, surgical options may produce better results — a good injector will tell you honestly which camp you're in.
Horizontal Neck Lines (Tech Neck)
The horizontal lines running across the neck — increasingly called 'tech neck' from years of looking down at phones — are a different issue than bands. These lines are a combination of skin creasing from repeated position and age-related skin laxity. Botox has limited effect on deeply etched horizontal neck lines, but can soften newer, less deep ones. Skin-tightening treatments like radiofrequency (Thermage), laser, or micro-needling radiofrequency (Morpheus8) often work better for horizontal neck lines. A good provider will recommend the right tool for each concern.
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Search by Zip Code →What to Expect from Neck Botox
Key things men should know about neck Botox:
- •Treatment uses 25–50 units total across multiple injection points
- •Platysmal band treatment is more technical — seek an experienced injector
- •Results visible within 1–2 weeks
- •Duration: 3–4 months, similar to other areas
- •Slight neck soreness for 1–2 days after is normal
- •Avoid intense neck exercises (heavy shrugs, neck bridges) for 48 hours post-treatment
- •Results are subtle — significant jawline definition improvement, less dramatic band reduction
Combining Neck Botox with Other Treatments
Most men treating the neck also benefit from concurrent jawline filler or chin filler to restore the jaw-neck angle definition that's lost with age. Kybella (deoxycholic acid) can address submental fat under the chin, which contributes to the lost jaw definition. For significant skin laxity, radiofrequency microneedling or ultrasound-based treatments like Ultherapy tighten the skin that Botox alone can't address. A comprehensive lower face plan usually combines 2–3 of these modalities.
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Search by Zip Code →Find a provider skilled in male neck Botox at /find-botox-near-me — search by zip code for specialists near you.