Botox in the U.S. is usually priced per unit, at about $10 to $20 per unit, or sometimes per treatment area at roughly $200 to $600. Most single areas like the forehead or crow’s feet need 20 to 40 units, so a typical visit lands between $250 and $600. The American Society of Plastic Surgeons puts the average cost of a botulinum toxin treatment near $435 to $530 (ASPS). Below we break down per-unit versus per-area pricing, typical units by area, what changes the price, and how to compare quotes without overpaying.
The essentials
- Per unit: about $10 to $20, the most transparent way to be charged.
- Per area: about $200 to $600, simpler but can hide how many units you actually get.
- Typical visit: $250 to $600 for one or two areas, more for three or more.
- National average: roughly $435 to $530 per botulinum toxin session (ASPS).
- How long it lasts: about 3 to 4 months, so budget for 2 to 3 visits a year to maintain results.
How is Botox priced: per unit or per area?
Botox is priced one of two ways, and the difference matters for your wallet. Per-unit pricing charges you for the exact number of units injected, usually $10 to $20 per unit, which is the most transparent method because the dose is the product. Per-area pricing charges a flat fee per treatment zone, often $200 to $600, which is simpler but can obscure how many units you receive. A flat area price can be a good deal or a poor one depending on the units behind it, so it is fair to ask how many units a per-area price includes.
For example: if a clinic quotes $12 per unit and your forehead lines need 20 units, that area costs about $240. If another clinic quotes a flat $350 for the same area but only injects 15 units, you are paying more per unit for less product. Comparing on a per-unit basis is the cleanest way to see value.
How many units of Botox do you need by area?
The number of units depends on the muscle and how strong it is. The table below shows typical ranges manufacturers and injectors cite for common areas. Your provider will tailor the dose to your anatomy and goals, so treat these as planning figures, not a fixed menu.
| Treatment area | Typical units | Approx. cost at $14/unit |
|---|---|---|
| Forehead lines | 10 to 30 | $140 to $420 |
| Frown lines (the 11s) | 20 to 30 | $280 to $420 |
| Crow’s feet (both sides) | 10 to 24 | $140 to $336 |
| Bunny lines / lip flip | 4 to 10 | $56 to $140 |
| Masseter (jaw slimming) | 20 to 50 per side | $560 to $1,400 |
The lip flip is one of the lowest-cost ways to try a tox treatment because it uses so few units. If you are weighing it against a filler approach, our lip flip vs lip filler comparison explains the cost and result differences in detail.
What factors change the price of Botox?
Two people can pay very different totals for Botox, and the reasons are usually predictable. Knowing them helps you read a quote and avoid both overpaying and underdosing.
- Number of units: the single biggest driver, since you are paying for the product. Stronger muscles need more units.
- Areas treated: treating three areas costs more than one, though some clinics discount multi-area plans.
- Injector expertise: a board-certified or highly experienced injector often charges more per unit, and that experience reduces the risk of an uneven result.
- Geography: large metro markets typically price higher than smaller towns.
- Brand: Botox, Dysport, Xeomin, and Jeuveau are dosed differently, so a per-unit price is not directly comparable across brands.
- Promotions and memberships: loyalty programs, manufacturer rewards such as Allē, and package pricing can lower your effective cost.
Because brands are dosed differently, comparing Botox with its alternatives on price alone is misleading. Our guide to Botox vs other wrinkle relaxers explains how Dysport, Xeomin, and Jeuveau differ in units and how to compare them fairly.
What is the real annual cost of Botox?
Because Botox lasts about three to four months, the figure that matters for budgeting is the annual cost, not the price of one visit. Most people maintain their result with two to three treatments a year. If a single area costs you around $300 and you treat it three times a year, that is roughly $900 annually for one zone. Treating two or three areas naturally raises that total. Planning around the yearly number, rather than a single appointment, gives you a realistic picture of the commitment.
Results also tend to last a little longer once your muscles adjust over repeated treatments, which can stretch the interval between visits slightly. For more on what shortens or extends your results, see our guide to how long Botox lasts and how to make it last longer.
Is cheap Botox a red flag?
A price far below the local market can be a warning sign, though not always. Very low per-unit pricing sometimes signals heavily diluted product, an inexperienced injector, or units that do not add up to an effective dose. Botox is a medical treatment, and the skill of the person injecting it shapes both safety and how natural the result looks. That does not mean the most expensive clinic is automatically the best, but it does mean price should be weighed alongside the injector’s training and your comfort at the consultation. If a deal looks too good to be true, ask exactly how many units you will receive and who is performing the injection.
If you are new to injectables, it is worth understanding the full picture before your first visit. Our overview of preventative Botox covers when starting earlier makes sense and how that changes long-term cost, and you can review our approach on the wrinkle relaxers service page.
How to compare Botox quotes
The cleanest way to compare clinics is on a per-unit basis, then layer in expertise and convenience. Ask each clinic for the per-unit price, the estimated units for your specific areas, who performs the injection and their credentials, and whether any membership or rewards program lowers your cost. A clinic that quotes you a per-unit price and an honest unit estimate is giving you a real budget, while a flat per-area price with no unit count makes comparison impossible. Bring your goals to the consultation, since the right dose for a natural result is more important than the lowest sticker price.
How can you save on Botox without cutting corners?
There are legitimate ways to lower your Botox spend that do not involve risky discounts. Manufacturer rewards programs, such as Allē for Botox, give points toward future treatments. Many clinics run loyalty or membership plans that bundle a set number of units at a better per-unit rate, and treating multiple areas in one visit is often discounted versus separate appointments. Booking with an experienced injector who doses you correctly the first time also saves money over the year, because an underdosed result that fades early means paying again sooner. The goal is value, which means the right dose from a skilled injector at a fair per-unit price, not the lowest sticker number.
Botox vs filler: which costs more?
Botox and dermal fillers solve different problems and are priced differently, so they are not direct substitutes. Botox relaxes muscles to soften dynamic lines and is priced per unit, while filler adds volume and is priced per syringe, usually several hundred dollars each. A single filler syringe often costs more than a single Botox area, but filler can last 6 to 18 months versus 3 to 4 months for Botox, so the annual comparison is closer than it first appears. Which is more cost-effective depends entirely on your concern, and many people use both for different areas of the face.
Frequently asked questions about Botox cost
How much does Botox cost per unit?
In the U.S., Botox typically costs about $10 to $20 per unit, with the exact price depending on your region and injector. Per-unit pricing is the most transparent way to be charged because you pay for the exact dose injected.
How much is Botox for the forehead?
Forehead lines usually take 10 to 30 units, so at a typical per-unit price the area often costs around $140 to $420. Many people treat the forehead and frown lines together, which raises the total but is commonly discounted as a multi-area plan.
Why is Botox cheaper at some clinics?
Lower prices can reflect a smaller market, a promotion, or a newer injector, but very cheap Botox can also mean diluted product or too few units. Compare on a per-unit basis and confirm who is injecting and how many units you will receive.
Does insurance cover Botox?
Cosmetic Botox is not covered by insurance and is paid out of pocket. Botox for certain medical conditions, such as chronic migraine, may be covered, but that is billed and assessed separately from aesthetic treatment.
How often do I need to pay for Botox?
Because results last about three to four months, most people return two to three times a year. Budgeting by the year rather than by the visit gives a more realistic picture of the cost.
Is per-unit or per-area pricing better?
Per-unit pricing is usually more transparent because you pay for the exact dose. Per-area pricing is simpler but can hide how many units you receive, so ask for the unit count behind any flat area price.
Prices in this guide are illustrative U.S. market ranges for 2026 and not a quote. Dosing and cost are set by your injector after a consultation. This article is educational and not medical advice. Last updated June 2026.