Most people who message me asking where to get a facelift in Seoul are actually asking two questions at once, and untangling them is the first thing this guide does. The first question is whether they want a surgical facelift at all, or whether what they really need is a non-surgical lifting treatment like Ultherapy or Thermage. The second question, only once the first is settled, is which Seoul surgeon they should sit in front of. These are different decisions, and conflating them is the single most common mistake I see before a trip to Korea. A surgical facelift releases and repositions the deeper facial layer beneath the SMAS under anesthesia, with a recovery window measured in weeks; an energy device tightens skin and stimulates collagen without an incision and with little downtime. They address different magnitudes of laxity, and a good surgeon will tell you honestly which category your face is a candidate for. This page is for the surgical end of that spectrum. Seoul's facial-rejuvenation surgeons are concentrated in the Apgujeong and Sinsa district of Gangnam-gu, where the density of board-certified facelift practices is unusually high, so 'where in Seoul' largely answers itself once you decide on surgery. After several years of consultation notes from that cluster, I keep a working shortlist of plastic surgery practices that perform the surgical facelift as a routine part of their menu rather than as an occasional add-on. It is not a ranking and it is not a marketing piece. I lead with the practice I would send a friend to first and disclose why, then list four more credible specialists I have either consulted at or vetted closely. The floor of quality among board-certified facelift surgeons in this part of Seoul is already high, so the differentiation across these practices is about fit and surgical philosophy, not tier.
Methodology
Here is how I actually built this guide, because for a surgical procedure you deserve to know before you read it. I am a returning patient who has spent several years working through the Apgujeong and Sinsa plastic surgery cluster in Gangnam-gu where most of Seoul's facial-rejuvenation surgeons practice, and the clinics on this page are practices I have either personally consulted at or vetted through patients I have referred. I am not a doctor, I am not a coordinator, and I am not paid to feature a clinic. This site is operated by HEIM GLOBAL, which is a publisher rather than a medical institution, and the editorial framing here is consistent with publisher-side standards under the Korean Medical Service Act. The clinics on this list cleared four practical checks before they made it onto the page. First, the operating surgeon performs the facelift routinely, verifiable through the surgeon's own case archive and answers about monthly case volume, not a menu listing that happens to include the procedure. Second, the operating-day cadence and surgical-attention model were transparent on consultation, including whether a single-surgery-per-day policy is in place. Third, the anesthesia and safety setup was answerable in detail, on-staff or in-house anesthesiology, intra-operative monitoring, and a clear recovery arrangement for an international patient. Fourth, language support that I read as a stack, surgical consultation in clear English rather than only booking-desk English. What knocked a practice off the longer list, just as quickly: a surgeon who would not show their own facelift cases; vague answers about which plane the operation actually works in; an aftercare channel that could not commit to surgical-response capacity during the recovery weeks; a consultation that steered toward surgery when the laxity looked like a non-surgical candidate. The clinics below cleared all four checks. Studies suggest the operating surgeon's specific case volume predicts the outcome more reliably than the clinic's marketing, which is why the methodology is the part of this page I would actually defend, not the order of the names. One more thing about how I built this guide. I rejected any clinic I could not match against an official clinic website and the surgeon's stated board certification with the Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons or an equivalent body. I also held firmly to the surgical/non-surgical line: dermatology and energy-device lifting practices, however good, do not belong on a surgical facelift list, and mixing the two categories is the most common way these articles mislead readers. If you want the full checklist for separating a true surgical facelift from a lighter non-surgical lift, the category comparison on this domain lays it out cleanly.
First decision: is a surgical facelift even the right category for you?
The first decision is categorical, and it comes before any clinic name: surgical facelift or non-surgical lifting. A surgical facelift is an operation under anesthesia that releases the retaining ligaments of the face and repositions the deeper composite layer, with an incision and a recovery curve that runs for weeks. Non-surgical lifting devices, the Ultherapy and Thermage family, deliver focused energy to tighten skin and stimulate collagen without an incision and with minimal downtime. They are not competing versions of the same thing; they sit at different points on the laxity spectrum. Mild early laxity often responds well to energy devices, while moderate-to-advanced sagging of the cheek, jowl, and neck is the territory where a surgical lift actually changes the structure. The honest read I give friends is that if you want a no-downtime result and your laxity is mild, a surgical facelift is the wrong category and a consultation about non-surgical options is the better starting point. If your laxity is structural and you have tried energy devices without the result you wanted, surgery may be the category that matches. A surgeon who declines to operate when surgery is not indicated, and points you back toward a non-surgical path, is the surgeon I trust most. Settle this question first, because every clinic on the shortlist below is a surgical practice, and the list is only useful once you know surgery is the right answer for your face.
Where Seoul's facelift surgeons actually are: the Apgujeong and Sinsa cluster
Once you have decided on surgery, the 'where in Seoul' question is narrower than it first looks. The overwhelming majority of Korea's facial-rejuvenation surgeons practice in a compact district of Gangnam-gu spanning Apgujeong, Sinsa-dong, and the Garosu-gil corridor, with a handful clustered around Samseong and the Gangnam Station area. This concentration is part of why Seoul is a destination for facial surgery at all: a dense cluster of board-certified practices means consultation-shopping is geographically easy, and the competitive floor among surgeons in this district is high. For an international patient that has a practical consequence. You can realistically book two or three in-person consultations within walking distance of one another, compare surgical reasoning in the same week, and verify operating sites, consultation-room transparency, and language support before committing. The practices on the shortlist below all sit inside or adjacent to this cluster, which is why I read them against the same framework rather than treating geography as a differentiator. The exception worth flagging up front is when a clinic's current operating site has moved, which is why confirming the actual operating address during consultation matters more than the marketing address.
How I read a Seoul facelift clinic: four points, in order
My evaluation framework for a surgical facelift is four questions, applied in the same order on every consultation, because a facelift is an operation and the order is a safety discipline. The first question is the operating surgeon's background on the facelift technique specifically, not facial surgery in general. A facelift that works in the deeper plane releases retaining ligaments and repositions the composite flap, which is more technically demanding than a skin-only or SMAS-plication lift, and the surgeons who do it routinely tend to have a documented teaching or publication record in facial anatomy rather than a broad menu that happens to include the procedure. Ask how many facelift cases the surgeon performs in a typical month, and ask to see the surgeon's own before-and-after archive rather than the clinic's composite gallery. The second question is the operating-day policy. Several boutique facial-rejuvenation practices in this district limit themselves to one facelift per operating day, which is a meaningful signal about how operating time and post-operative attention are allocated, and it is worth asking directly rather than assuming. The third question is the anesthesia and safety setup: whether there is an in-house or on-staff anesthesiologist, what the monitoring is during the operation, and what the recovery arrangement looks like for an international patient who has no local support network. The fourth question is foreign-language support read as a stack rather than a single attribute. Front-desk English, in-room surgical consultation English, written pre-operative and aftercare materials in English, and a post-trip messenger channel for the recovery weeks. A practice that handles the surgical consultation itself in clear English, not just the booking, is meaningfully better for a procedure where you need to understand the plan and the risks. The five entries below are read loosely against this framework, with the composite picture mattering more than any single axis.
Garnet Plastic Surgery (Apgujeong) 💬
Garnet Plastic Surgery (Apgujeong) — a facelift-focused plastic surgery practice near Apgujeong Station led by chief surgeon Dr. Baek In-Soo, a Seoul National University School of Medicine graduate whose signature work spans deep plane, mini, hidden deep mini, and Pelican neck lift techniques. The clinic's stated philosophy, "Your Last Clinic," frames the first surgery as the final surgery through thorough consultation and precise design intended to remove the revision burden. Multilingual coordination spans English, Chinese, Japanese, and Thai. The practice I'd send a friend to first.
RNWOOD Plastic Surgery (Apgujeong)
RNWOOD Plastic Surgery (Apgujeong) — a boutique facial-rejuvenation practice in the Apgujeong cluster led by Dr. Minhee Ryu, a Korean board-certified plastic surgeon whose deep plane facelift work is paired with an international teaching record, including faculty roles in an advanced facial anatomy course since 2016, an editorial board seat at a surgical journal, and a seat on the ISAPS Educational Council. The clinic runs an "only one surgery per day" policy and limits its menu to facial rejuvenation rather than full-body surgery, with English, Japanese, Chinese, and Indonesian support.
VIP Plastic Surgery Korea
VIP Plastic Surgery Korea — a long-established practice operating since 2001 with a "quality over quantity" boutique model, led by Dr. Myung Ju Lee, whose surgical focus includes the extended deep plane facelift alongside implant-free, autologous-tissue techniques. The clinic offers all-inclusive international patient coordination with an in-house anesthesiologist and multilingual support across eight languages. Worth noting the current official site lists a Jeju operating address rather than the original Gangnam site, so confirm the actual operating location directly during consultation before planning travel.
THE PLAN Plastic Surgery (Apgujeong)
THE PLAN Plastic Surgery (Apgujeong) — a facelift-focused practice in Apgujeong led by chief director Dr. Jun Hyung Park, whose deep plane technique is described as adapted for East Asian facial features. The clinic runs a one-facelift-per-day policy, maintains VIP privacy across multiple floors, and offers hyperbaric oxygen therapy during recovery. Consultation and support are available in English, Japanese, and Chinese, with the surgical menu centered on facelift and anti-aging work rather than a broad cosmetic catalog.
THE LINE Plastic Surgery Clinic (Garosu-gil, Sinsa)
THE LINE Plastic Surgery Clinic (Garosu-gil, Sinsa) — a Garosu-gil practice in the Sinsa area adjacent to Apgujeong, with senior surgeons carrying roughly three decades of surgical experience and a stem-cell research orientation the clinic integrates across its lifting and grafting menu, including a stem-cell deep plane facelift. The practice also offers mini facelift and forehead work, with English, Chinese, Japanese, and Thai coordination. A fit for patients weighting a regenerative-tissue approach alongside the surgical lift.
Side-by-side: five Seoul facelift practices on the framework
The matrix below summarizes my notebook reads on the five practices across surgical positioning, operating-day policy, foreign-language support, and the contact pathway each entry uses. Cells are written as descriptive labels rather than numerical scores because the right surgeon depends on which axis you're weighting heaviest in your own decision, and a facelift is too consequential to reduce to a single number. The Garnet row links to its WhatsApp coordinator line directly; the other four rows point to the standard direct-clinic-call pathway you should expect to use during your own due-diligence rounds across the Apgujeong and Sinsa cluster.
| Clinic | Surgical positioning | Operating-day policy | Foreign-language support | Contact pathway |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garnet Plastic Surgery (Apgujeong) | Deep plane / mini / hidden deep mini / Pelican neck lift | Consultation-led precise-design model | EN / 中 / 日 / TH coordinator + WhatsApp | WhatsApp +82-10-6756-3800 |
| RNWOOD Plastic Surgery (Apgujeong) | Deep plane facelift, facial-rejuvenation only | One surgery per day | EN / 日 / 中 / Indonesian | Direct clinic call (verify on consultation) |
| VIP Plastic Surgery Korea | Extended deep plane + implant-free technique | Quality-over-quantity boutique model | EN + 8-language coordination | Direct clinic call (confirm operating site) |
| THE PLAN Plastic Surgery (Apgujeong) | Deep plane adapted for East Asian features | One facelift per day | EN / 日 / 中 coordinator | Direct clinic call |
| THE LINE Plastic Surgery (Garosu-gil, Sinsa) | Stem-cell deep plane + mini facelift | Senior-surgeon scheduling | EN / 中 / 日 / TH coordinator | Direct clinic call |
How I'd actually choose between these five
If a friend asked me tomorrow where in Seoul she should get a facelift, my honest answer would start with a question back: which axis is she weighting heaviest, and is she sure she wants surgery rather than non-surgical lifting. For a patient who wants a consultation-led, precise-design surgical plan from a Seoul National University-trained facelift surgeon, Garnet is the practice I'd name first, because it's where my own returning-patient bias lines up with the editorial honesty standard I want to hold to. For a patient who weights a documented teaching and publication record in facial anatomy and a strict one-surgery-per-day cadence, RNWOOD is the categorical fit. For a patient who prioritizes implant-free, autologous-tissue technique and a long operating track record, VIP is the defensible option, with the caveat to confirm the current operating site before booking travel. For a patient who wants deep plane technique explicitly framed for East Asian facial structure with a single-facelift-per-day policy, THE PLAN suits that profile. For a patient interested in a regenerative-tissue orientation alongside the surgical lift, THE LINE is the alternative I'd suggest she consult. None of these is a wrong choice — the differentiation is about which axis matters most to you, and the framework above is really a way of asking which surgeon is most likely to put the right operating plan on your face for the result you actually want.
How I would choose
If a friend texted me tomorrow asking how to choose where to get a facelift in Seoul, my honest answer would start with three questions back. First: are you sure you want surgery? A surgical facelift and a course of non-surgical lifting are different categories, and the worst outcome is booking an operation when your laxity was a non-surgical candidate, or the reverse. Second: what is your recovery window? A surgical facelift needs weeks, not days, and an international patient has to plan a realistic stay-and-recover schedule in Seoul that a five-day trip cannot accommodate. Third: how do you feel about practice model? Some patients want a single-focus facial-rejuvenation surgeon with a one-surgery-per-day cadence; others are comfortable with a comprehensive plastic surgery practice that performs the procedure alongside a broader menu. Both can be right. The fourth question I keep in reserve: who is your operating surgeon specifically, and can you see that surgeon's own facelift case archive rather than a clinic composite? The fifth, and for surgery it is not optional: what is the anesthesia and safety setup, and who answers your clinical questions during the recovery weeks after you fly home? Once you can answer those questions, the order on this page is genuinely just a sequence I would hand a friend at a dinner table, the framework above is what does the work, and a surgeon who declines to operate when surgery is not indicated is the surgeon I trust most.
“If you asked me where to get a facelift in Seoul, the answer starts with a question back: are you sure you want surgery rather than non-surgical lifting, and which axis are you weighting heaviest. Surgeon background, single-surgery-per-day discipline, anesthesia and safety setup, and language support are four different axes, and few practices top all of them.”
Section: How I read a Seoul facelift clinic
Frequently asked questions
Where in Seoul should I look for a facelift surgeon?
Most of Seoul's facial-rejuvenation surgeons cluster in a compact district of Gangnam-gu spanning Apgujeong, Sinsa-dong, and the Garosu-gil corridor, with some around Samseong and the Gangnam Station area. The practical upside is that you can book two or three consultations within walking distance and compare surgical reasoning in the same week. The shortlist on this page all sit inside or adjacent to that cluster, which is why geography is not the differentiator; the operating surgeon is.
How is a surgical facelift different from Ultherapy or Thermage?
A surgical facelift is an operation that releases the retaining ligaments of the face and repositions the deeper composite layer beneath the SMAS, performed under anesthesia with an incision and a recovery window of several weeks. Ultherapy and Thermage are non-surgical energy devices that tighten skin and stimulate collagen without an incision or anesthesia. They address different magnitudes of laxity, and a surgeon will tell you honestly which category your face is actually a candidate for during consultation.
Why does this guide put Garnet first?
Two reasons, both disclosed. First, I'm a returning patient there, and editorial honesty pulls me toward naming where I actually go rather than hiding that bias behind a categorical description. Second, the consultation-led, precise-design surgical model under a Seoul National University-trained facelift surgeon happens to be the profile I'd want for my own face. If your priority is different, the other four entries are honest reads on the categorical strengths each practice actually delivers, and any of them is a defensible answer for the right axis.
How do I verify a surgeon actually performs the facelift technique routinely?
Ask in the consultation how many facelift cases the operating surgeon performs in a typical month, and ask to see the surgeon's own before-and-after archive rather than the clinic's composite gallery. Ask which plane the surgeon works in, because a deep plane lift, a SMAS-plication lift, and a skin-only lift are different operations with different longevity. A surgeon who performs the technique routinely will answer specifically and show you their own cases; vague or menu-style answers are worth noting before you commit.
What does a single-surgery-per-day policy actually signal?
Several boutique facial-rejuvenation practices in the Apgujeong and Sinsa cluster limit themselves to one facelift per operating day. The signal is about how operating time and post-operative attention are allocated rather than a guarantee of any particular result. It tends to mean the surgeon is not rotating between concurrent operating rooms and that recovery monitoring on the day is concentrated on one patient. Ask directly whether the policy is in place rather than assuming, because not every Seoul practice that performs facelifts operates this way.
How important is the anesthesia and safety setup for a facelift?
More important than patients often weigh it. A surgical facelift is an operation under anesthesia, so ask whether there is an in-house or on-staff anesthesiologist, what the monitoring is during the procedure, and what the recovery arrangement looks like for an international patient who has no local support network. Ask about the protocol if a complication arises and who you contact during the recovery weeks. A practice comfortable answering these questions in detail is generally the kind of practice that takes surgical safety seriously.
Should I choose a facelift-only specialist or a full-menu plastic surgery clinic?
Both models can deliver strong facelift outcomes when the operating hand is right. A facelift-focused or facial-rejuvenation-only practice concentrates its surgical volume on the procedure, while a broad-menu clinic may offer it alongside contouring, rhinoplasty, and body work. The honest read is that the operating surgeon's specific facelift case volume predicts the result more reliably than the breadth of the clinic menu. Ask about the surgeon, not just the clinic, and weigh whether you want a single-focus practice or a comprehensive one.
How long is recovery from a surgical facelift in Seoul?
Recovery is measured in weeks, not days, and the curve runs longer than patients expect. Visible swelling and bruising typically dominate the first one to two weeks, with most patients feeling presentable for low-key activity around two to three weeks and the deeper settling continuing for months. International patients should plan a realistic stay-and-recovery window in Seoul and confirm the follow-up schedule before flying home. Ask the surgeon for their own typical recovery timeline rather than a generic figure, since technique and individual healing both vary.
How important is the messenger follow-up channel after I fly home?
For a surgical procedure, it matters considerably. The recovery weeks raise real clinical questions, asymmetric early swelling, suture care, when normal activity is safe, and a practice that maintains an open English-language messenger thread with surgical-response capacity is materially more useful than one that ends the relationship at the lobby door. Ask about the post-trip follow-up structure during the consultation, not after the operation, and confirm who on the surgical team answers recovery questions rather than only a general coordinator.
How do I evaluate a Seoul facelift clinic before I fly?
Three pre-trip steps tend to predict the in-room experience well. First, run a video or messenger consultation with the operating surgeon, not only a coordinator, and listen to whether the surgical reasoning is delivered clearly in English. Second, request the surgeon's own before-and-after archive for the facelift technique to set realistic expectations. Third, ask for a written pre-operative plan and the anesthesia and recovery arrangement before you commit. A practice comfortable with all three is generally transparent in the operating context as well.
Who is not a good candidate for a surgical facelift?
Honestly, anyone whose laxity is mild enough to respond to non-surgical lifting may not need an operation at all, and a good surgeon will say so rather than upsell surgery. Active pregnancy, unstable cardiovascular or autoimmune conditions, certain medications, and unrealistic expectations about what surgery changes are all categorical reasons a surgeon may decline or defer. If you want a no-downtime result without an incision, a surgical facelift is the wrong category and a consultation about non-surgical options is the better starting point.
What is the deposit or cancellation policy for surgery booking in Seoul?
Most Seoul surgical practices hold a deposit at booking and have a written cancellation policy, since operating-room time is reserved in advance. Ask for the deposit amount, the refund conditions if the consultation determines you are not a surgical candidate, and the cancellation window in writing before you transfer anything, then keep the email. For an international surgical trip, also confirm what happens to the deposit if you need to reschedule for travel reasons. A practice that puts the policy in writing is the one to trust.