Most men are surprised to learn that their skincare routine, supplements, and even some foods can affect their Botox experience — not the result of the Botox itself, but the injection process, bruising risk, and skin recovery. Understanding what to pause, when to pause it, and what's actually fine to continue removes unnecessary anxiety about your appointment and optimizes your outcome.
Blood Thinners: The Most Important Category
The biggest pre-Botox concern isn't the skincare ingredients — it's blood thinners, which increase bruising risk at injection sites. Blood thinners fall into two categories: prescription medications you should discuss with your doctor before pausing, and OTC supplements/NSAIDs where the standard guidance is to pause for 5-7 days before treatment. The OTC blood thinners that most men encounter: aspirin (unless prescribed for cardiovascular health), ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin), naproxen (Aleve), fish oil / omega-3 supplements, vitamin E at high doses, ginkgo biloba, garlic supplements, and ginseng. If you take aspirin or blood thinners by prescription for a cardiovascular condition, do NOT stop them without consulting your doctor.
Stop 5-7 days before your appointment:
- •Aspirin (OTC, not prescribed for heart health without doctor approval)
- •Ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin) — switch to acetaminophen/Tylenol for pain if needed
- •Naproxen (Aleve)
- •Fish oil / omega-3 supplements
- •Vitamin E supplements above 400 IU
- •Ginkgo biloba
- •Garlic and ginseng supplements
- •Alcohol — stop 24-48 hours before; it dilates blood vessels and increases bruising
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Search by Zip Code →Topical Skincare: What to Stop Before Botox
Topical skincare ingredients that cause skin sensitivity, barrier disruption, or irritation should be paused before Botox. The main category: retinoids (retinol, tretinoin, adapalene) — pause them 2-3 days before your appointment. Alpha-hydroxy acids (AHAs: glycolic acid, lactic acid) and beta-hydroxy acids (BHAs: salicylic acid) — stop 2-3 days before. Chemical exfoliants that are prescription-strength should be stopped 5-7 days before. Everything else — moisturizer, gentle cleanser, vitamin C serums, SPF — is fine to continue. Come to your appointment with clean, moisturized skin and no makeup on the treatment areas.
What you can keep using right up to your appointment: gentle cleanser, a simple moisturizer, SPF, and prescription medications (unless your doctor advises otherwise). You don't need to strip your skincare routine dramatically — just pause the actives that sensitize or thin the skin.
What to Avoid After Botox
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Search by Zip Code →For 24 hours after Botox: no rubbing, massaging, or pressing on the treated areas — this can spread the toxin to unintended muscles. No exercise — elevated heart rate and facial flushing can theoretically affect distribution. No alcohol — dilates vessels and may increase bruising. No lying face-down or applying prolonged pressure to the face. No heat exposure: saunas, hot tubs, very hot showers. After 24 hours, all normal activity resumes. Resume your skincare routine (including retinol and acids) after 48-72 hours.
Alcohol: The Most Common Mistake Men Make
The single most common pre-Botox mistake men make is having drinks the night before their appointment without realizing it matters. Alcohol is a vasodilator — it opens blood vessels, increases blood flow to the skin, and makes bruising dramatically more likely. A night of moderate drinking before a morning appointment can transform a no-bruise treatment into a visible bruising situation. The rule is simple: no alcohol for 24 hours before treatment and 24 hours after. Find a provider with clear pre-care instructions at /find-botox-near-me.