If you searched for “Aesthetica Med Spa” and landed here, this guide is for you. We’ll clarify the common name confusion, explain what to look for in a medical spa, and help you find your nearest Esthetica Medspa location — board-supervised, multi-state, with transparent pricing.
Looking for “Aesthetica Med Spa”? Here’s what to know
“Aesthetica” and “Esthetica” are commonly searched interchangeably. Both refer to the field of aesthetic medicine, but they are different brands and different clinics. If you have a specific clinic in mind, confirm:
- The exact business name (Aesthetica Med Spa, Aesthetica Medical Spa, Esthetica Medspa, etc.).
- The city or address — clinics with similar names operate in different states.
- The medical director and licensure of the staff.
Esthetica Medspa is a multi-location U.S. brand offering laser hair removal, body contouring (CoolSculpting), injectables (Botox, Dysport, Xeomin, Jeuveau) and skin treatments. We are not affiliated with any clinic operating under the “Aesthetica” name.
How to choose a medical spa — 5-point checklist
A medical spa offers procedures that combine wellness and clinical aesthetics — laser, injectables, body contouring, skin therapies. Before booking anywhere, our how-to-choose a med spa guide and top-rated medical spas guide are good companion reads.
- Medical supervision. Is there a licensed medical director (MD, DO, PA or NP) on record? Ask for the name and license number.
- Provider credentials. Are injectors and laser technicians certified? Ask about their training pathway (RN, NP, PA) and continuing education.
- Technology transparency. Which devices and brands do they use? FDA-cleared platforms are non-negotiable.
- Written quotes. Reputable spas provide written treatment plans with the total cost before you commit. Run from “trust us” pricing.
- Real reviews. Read across Google, Yelp and the BBB. Look for patterns, not isolated incidents.
Case: patient came to us after a poor experience elsewhere
A 41-year-old patient came to Esthetica in March 2026 after a frustrating six-month experience at a different medical spa. The previous clinic had sold her a $4,200 package of “laser hair removal + body contouring + skin tightening” without specifying which devices were used or the protocol per session. After 8 visits she had partial results, persistent post-inflammatory pigmentation on her bikini line, and no written record of what had actually been done.
- What we did differently. Free 60-minute consultation. Skin-type assessment (Fitzpatrick IV). Listed the exact devices we’d use (Nd:YAG 1064 nm for laser hair removal, CoolSculpting + Ultherapy for body), and the protocol per area. Written quote: $3,400 with a clear refund policy. Provided the medical director’s name and license number on the spot.
- Patch test. Mandatory before starting the new laser series. Observed at 48 hours.
- Outcome. Pigmentation resolved with topical protocol over 8 weeks. New laser series started session 6 of 8 at the time of this writing, on track for the published 70–90% reduction.
The takeaway for any patient comparing clinics: ask for the device names in writing, the medical director’s license number, and a signed treatment plan. Reputable spas welcome these requests.
Medical spa vs regular spa — the legal differences
| Attribute | Regular spa | Medical spa |
|---|---|---|
| Medical director on record | No | Yes, required by most states |
| Procedures offered | Massages, facials, body scrubs | Injectables, laser, body contouring, IV therapy |
| Provider licensing | Esthetician certificate | RN, NP, PA or MD depending on service |
| Treatments break skin barrier | No | Yes (injectables, microneedling, lasers) |
| State board oversight | Cosmetology board | Medical board + cosmetology |
| Insurance / liability | General business | Medical malpractice required |
If a “medical spa” cannot name its medical director when asked at the front desk, it is operating outside legal scope. Walk out.
Esthetica Medspa locations — find your nearest clinic
We operate in multiple U.S. metros. Most patients drive 20 minutes or less to their preferred location. Use the locator on our site to find office address and parking, on-site services, hours and same-day availability, and provider profiles.
If you don’t see your city listed, we partner with carefully vetted clinics — contact us and we will refer you to a comparable provider locally.
Signature treatments at Esthetica Medspa
| Category | Treatments | Typical session |
|---|---|---|
| Laser | Hair removal (King of Prussia and other locations), vascular lesions, pigmentation | 10–90 min |
| Body contouring | CoolSculpting, Emsculpt, BTL Vanquish | 35–60 min |
| Injectables | Botox, Dysport, Xeomin, Jeuveau, dermal fillers | 15–45 min |
| Skin treatments | HydraFacial, chemical peels, microneedling | 45–60 min |
For city-specific laser hair removal info, see our King of Prussia guide.
Pricing transparency red flags
- “We’ll figure out the price as we go.” Reputable medspas quote in writing before you commit.
- Unlabeled packages. If the package says “laser + contouring” without specifying devices, sessions or protocol, that’s not a real plan.
- Pressure to buy today. A free consultation should be informative, not a sales call.
- Refund policy missing or vague. Ask in writing. Reputable clinics have one.
- Add-ons sprung mid-treatment. Any provider switching the plan mid-session without your written consent is a red flag.
- Cash-only or no receipts. Tax-evasive practices correlate with weak quality control.
- Commission-based providers. Compensation tied to upsells means the provider’s incentive isn’t aligned with your actual needs.
Why our clients choose us
- Multi-wavelength laser suite (diode, alexandrite, Nd:YAG) for all skin tones.
- Board-supervised medical staff at every location.
- Transparent pricing with package and financing options (CareCredit, Cherry).
- Patch tests and consultations are free.
- No commission on upsells — your provider’s compensation is not linked to selling you more sessions.
- Written refund policy for unused package sessions.
- Same-day cancellation within 7 days of purchase, no questions asked.
How to know if a medical spa is right for you
Medical spas are appropriate when you want non-surgical, evidence-based treatments delivered with medical supervision. They are not appropriate for medical conditions that require dermatology or plastic surgery — for example, skin lesion biopsies, mole removal for diagnostic purposes, or surgical lifts.
If you are not sure, our consult is free and we will refer you out when a different specialty is the right fit.
Frequently asked questions
Is “Aesthetica Med Spa” the same as Esthetica Medspa?
No. They are different brands. We are not affiliated.
What’s the difference between a medical spa and a regular spa?
A medical spa offers treatments requiring medical supervision (injectables, laser, body contouring). A regular spa offers wellness services. Medical spas in most U.S. states must have a licensed medical director.
How do I verify the medical director of a spa?
Ask the front desk for the medical director’s name. State medical boards publish license lookups for free.
What treatments require a doctor’s presence?
Injectables, laser therapies, body contouring devices and any procedure breaking the skin barrier typically require medical supervision.
Do I need to be a “perfect candidate” to start treatments?
No. A consultation will tell you what you are a candidate for and what to skip.
How much should I expect to spend?
Single sessions range from $75 (small laser area) to $3,000+ (multi-cycle body contouring). Packages often reduce per-session cost.
Can I switch providers mid-treatment?
Yes. Bring your treatment records and we’ll pick up after a fresh assessment.
Do you offer telehealth consultations?
For some treatments we offer a brief virtual consult, but final assessment and treatment are in-person.
Can I bring my own treatment records from another clinic?
Yes, we welcome them. They help us avoid repeating tests and design a coherent plan.
What if I have a chronic skin condition?
Disclose at consultation. Conditions like eczema, rosacea or active acne may modify the protocol or contraindicate certain laser settings.
Can my partner and I book together?
Yes. Joint consultations are common, especially for couples planning packages together. Schedule both names when booking.
How long is the typical first visit?
Allow 60 minutes for the first consultation, including paperwork. Subsequent treatment sessions are typically 15–90 minutes depending on area.
Find your Esthetica Medspa clinic
Use the locator to find your nearest clinic, read provider bios and book a free consultation. We will give you the information you need to make a confident decision — even if Esthetica is not the right fit.



