Skip to main content
Surgeon Selection

How to Choose a Deep Plane Facelift Surgeon

Quick Answer

How do I find a qualified deep plane facelift surgeon?

Verify the surgeon in an official board registry first — the ABPS verify-certification tool or ABFPRS physician finder in the US, the GMC Specialist Register in the UK, TPRECD in Turkey, or EBOPRAS for Europe. Then confirm deep-plane-specific experience: 50+ deep plane facelifts per year, a clear sub-SMAS ligament-release explanation, 30+ consistent before/after cases, an accredited operating facility, and a written revision policy. No registry record means no booking, regardless of marketing.

Source: DEEPPLANE™ ·

The Short Answer

A qualified deep plane facelift surgeon is verifiable in an official board registry (ABPS, ABFPRS, GMC, TPRECD, KSPRS, SBCP or EBOPRAS), performs 50+ deep plane facelifts per year, can name the retaining ligaments they release in a sub-SMAS dissection, shows 30+ consistent before/after cases, operates in an accredited facility, and puts the revision policy in writing.

  • Certification is checked in a registry, never taken from a clinic's own website — every board below has a public lookup.
  • There is no "deep plane board": after the registry check, technique-specific volume and the seven consultation questions do the real filtering.

The deep plane facelift is an advanced sub-SMAS operation with a 2-3 year learning curve — the gap between an experienced deep plane surgeon and an occasional one is larger than for almost any other aesthetic procedure. This guide is an eight-step verification framework built on official board registries, not marketing claims: work through the steps in order, and eliminate any surgeon who fails step one.

Not sure the procedure itself is right for you yet? Start with am I a candidate for a deep plane facelift, then come back here to vet surgeons.

Verify First

Step 1 — Verify board certification in a named registry

Every legitimate deep plane facelift surgeon holds a specialty certification that you can confirm yourself, in an official public registry, in under five minutes. This is the single highest-value check in the entire process — and the one most often skipped. Do not accept a certificate image on a clinic website as proof; search the issuing board's own database:

If the surgeon does not appear in any official registry, stop — the remaining seven steps do not apply. Every surgeon profiled on our deep plane facelift surgeon directory lists their certification body so you can run this check against the source registry, and our surgeon verification tool shows what we verified and when.

Board certification by country

CountryCertifying board / titleOfficial registry
United StatesAmerican Board of Plastic Surgery (ABPS) or American Board of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery (ABFPRS)abplasticsurgery.org — verify certification
United KingdomGMC Specialist Register (Plastic Surgery)gmc-uk.org — the medical register
TurkeyTurkish Society of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery (TPRECD) membership + Ministry of Health specialist licenseplastikcerrahi.org.tr — TPRECD
GermanyFacharzt für Plastische und Ästhetische Chirurgie (state medical chamber title)bundesaerztekammer.de — German Medical Association
South KoreaKorean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons (KSPRS) board certificationplasticsurgery.or.kr — KSPRS
BrazilSociedade Brasileira de Cirurgia Plástica (SBCP) full membershipcirurgiaplastica.org.br — SBCP

Considering surgery abroad? The registry standard travels with you — see the best countries for a deep plane facelift and the Turkey surgeon directory for verified, per-country listings.

Technique Experience

Step 2 — Confirm deep-plane-specific training and case volume

Board certification proves the surgeon completed specialty training — it says nothing about the deep plane technique specifically. No board examines it, so this step is on you. Two direct questions do the work:

"Where did you learn the deep plane technique?"

Good answers name a fellowship, a named mentor, or structured cadaver-lab and observership training in sub-SMAS surgery. "I have done facelifts for 20 years" is not an answer about this operation.

"How many deep plane facelifts do you perform per year?"

50+ per year is the benchmark used by experienced patients and colleagues alike. The technique has a documented 2-3 year learning curve; volume is what compresses it.

A surgeon whose practice is genuinely centered on the face will volunteer these numbers comfortably. Hesitation, or an answer that pivots to overall career volume, tells you the deep plane is an occasional operation for them — see how the deep plane differs from SMAS techniques to understand why that distinction matters.

Consultation Script

Step 3 — Ask the seven technique questions

These seven questions separate surgeons who perform a true deep plane dissection from those who market the term. You do not need to judge the answers like a surgeon — you only need to notice whether the answers are specific, anatomical, and unhesitating.

  1. Do you release the retaining ligaments — and which ones?

    A true deep plane facelift releases the zygomatic-cutaneous and masseteric-cutaneous ligaments. A surgeon who cannot name them is describing a SMAS-level operation.

  2. What dissection plane do you work in — sub-SMAS or supra-SMAS?

    Deep plane means dissection beneath the SMAS as a composite flap. "We tighten the SMAS" usually means plication, a different operation with shorter-lived results.

  3. Do you perform an extended deep plane or a standard deep plane?

    The extended variant carries the release further into the neck (platysma) and midface. Ask which your anatomy needs and why.

  4. What is your facial-nerve safety protocol?

    Expect a concrete answer: knowledge of nerve danger zones, dissection landmarks, and what happens if a branch is weak after surgery.

  5. What anesthesia will be used, and who administers it?

    A 4-6 hour operation requires a physician anesthesiologist or certified anesthetist in an accredited facility — not unsupervised sedation.

  6. What is your revision policy if healing is asymmetric or under-corrected?

    Experienced deep plane surgeons quote revision rates of roughly 3-5% and put the policy in writing before surgery.

  7. Who actually performs my operation, start to finish?

    In some high-volume clinics, parts of the operation are delegated. Have the surgeon confirm in writing that they perform the dissection themselves.

For a printable, full consultation walkthrough, see the deep plane consultation guide.

Evidence Of Results

Step 4 — Evaluate before-and-after galleries critically

A gallery is evidence only when it is large and methodologically honest. Apply the same standards a colleague would:

  • 30+ of the surgeon's own cases — a handful of spectacular results proves nothing about consistency.
  • Same-angle, same-lighting pairs — front, three-quarter, and profile views, without makeup, filters, or flattering lighting shifts between before and after.
  • Anatomy that survived the operation — natural midface volume, an unmoved hairline, intact earlobes, incisions hidden at the tragus, and no windswept or pulled look.
  • Patients who resemble you — in age, anatomy, and skin quality. Ask to see cases like yours specifically.

Learn what natural deep plane results look like in our before-and-after guide.

Second Opinions

Step 5 — Compare two to three consultations

Never decide from a single consultation. Identical anatomy can honestly receive different surgical plans — extended deep plane with neck work, deep plane alone, or advice to wait. Hearing 2-3 plans exposes the reasoning behind each, calibrates realistic pricing, and reveals which surgeon is candid about limitations.

Treat the consultation itself as data: the best surgeons spend more time on your anatomy than on their marketing, explain what surgery cannot fix, and occasionally recommend against operating. Use the surgeon directory to shortlist verified deep plane specialists across countries, and the cost guide to sanity-check quotes.

Where You Are Operated

Step 6 — Check facility accreditation and anesthesia credentials

A deep plane facelift is a 4-6 hour operation under deep sedation or general anesthesia. The operating environment matters as much as the operator:

  • The facility should be a licensed hospital or an accredited ambulatory surgical center — in the US, look for AAAASF accreditation; elsewhere, the national hospital-licensing authority fills the same role.
  • Anesthesia should be administered by a physician anesthesiologist or certified anesthetist who is present for the entire case — ask by name and role.
  • Emergency planning — overnight observation capability and a written transfer arrangement with a nearby hospital if the center is free-standing.

International bodies such as ISAPS also maintain global membership standards that are useful supporting signals when comparing surgeons across borders.

Money, In Writing

Step 7 — Understand exactly what the quote includes

Deep plane quotes vary widely between surgeons and countries — but a complete quote always itemizes the same things. Before comparing prices, make sure each quote covers:

  • Surgeon's fee, anesthesia fee, and facility/operating-room fee — listed separately.
  • Pre-operative tests, post-operative garments, and medications.
  • All follow-up visits — how many, over what period, and (for surgery abroad) how remote follow-up is handled after you fly home.
  • Revision terms, in writing: under what conditions a revision is offered, within what timeframe, and who pays for the operating room and anesthesia if it happens.

A one-line lump-sum price with "everything included" and no itemization is where surprise costs hide. Benchmark ranges by country in the deep plane facelift cost guide.

Walk Away When

Step 8 — The red-flags checklist

Any single item below is reason to pause; two or more mean walk away — no matter how good the photos look or how attractive the price is.

  • No record in any official board registry — if you cannot find the surgeon on a registry from the table above, stop here.
  • An online presence showing only flawless outcomes and testimonials, with no discussion of complications, risks, or revision policy.
  • High-pressure discounts: "this price is only valid if you book today" is a sales tactic, not a medical recommendation.
  • Stock photography or heavily filtered images presented as surgical results.
  • No complication conversation at consultation — a surgeon who cannot describe hematoma, nerve-weakness, or scarring risk is not being straight with you.
  • The person answering your medical questions is a sales coordinator, not the operating surgeon.
  • Vague technique language — "we do all kinds of facelifts" — instead of a clear sub-SMAS, ligament-release explanation.
  • No physical facility address, or an operating room without national or international accreditation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Medical References

  1. 01
  2. 02
  3. 03
  4. 04
  5. 05

Start With a Verified Shortlist

Every surgeon in our directory lists their certification body, so you can run the step-1 registry check yourself before any contact.

Medical Review

Dr. Yakup Duman

Plastic, Reconstructive & Aesthetic Surgery Specialist

MDBoard CertifiedPlastic Surgery Specialist

Board-certified Plastic & Aesthetic Surgery specialist with 13+ years of experience. Specializes in deep plane facelift at Merkez Prime Hospital, Istanbul. Medical Reviewer for DEEPPLANE™.

Turkish Plastic Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery Association

Was this page helpful?
Continue Reading

Explore Further