PRP Facial Cost in 2026: $400–$1,500 Per Session — and the Version That Actually Works

published on 28 May 2026

The national price range for a PRP facial is $400 to $1,500 per session. That spread is wider than it looks, because "PRP facial" covers two different treatments: one that delivers moderate results and one that outperforms it in nearly every clinical measure.

Budget for the right version and factor in a full series (most providers require three sessions for real results), and you're looking at $1,200 to $4,500 total. Here's a clear breakdown of where your number will land.

Table of Contents

Two Versions: What You're Actually Comparing

Most people searching for "PRP facial" have seen the term "vampire facial" and assume they're the same thing. They're close but not identical, and the distinction matters when comparing prices.

Standalone PRP Facial (topical application only)

This version draws a small vial of your blood, spins it in a centrifuge to concentrate the platelet-rich plasma, then applies it to the surface of your skin. A provider may use a dermaroller or gentle massage to encourage absorption, but there's no deep penetration into the dermis. Results are mild: a temporary glow, some improvement in surface texture, and reduced puffiness. Cost range: $400–$900 per session.

Microneedling with PRP (the version most providers mean)

This is the treatment most providers are actually selling when they say "PRP facial." After drawing and spinning the blood, the provider runs a microneedling device across your face to create micro-channels into the dermis, then applies the PRP directly into those channels. The growth factors absorb deeper, collagen remodeling is more significant, and clinical studies show superior improvements in skin hydration, elasticity, and texture compared to microneedling alone. Cost range: $600–$1,500 per session.

When you see a quote below $500 for a "PRP facial," you're almost certainly looking at the topical-only version. Quotes of $700 and above typically include microneedling. Always ask which protocol the price covers before comparing clinics.

PRP Facial Cost Breakdown (2026)

Prices vary by treatment type, provider experience, location, and what's included in the session fee.

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Treatment Version Per Session 3-Session Series Best For
Standalone PRP facial (topical)$400–$900$1,200–$2,700Glow, mild texture improvement
Microneedling + PRP$600–$1,500$1,800–$4,500Fine lines, scarring, skin laxity
Package deals (3-session bundles)$500–$1,200 avg$1,500–$3,600Savings of 15–25% off single-session rate

What Drives the Cost Higher

Provider credentials have the biggest impact on price. A board-certified dermatologist or plastic surgeon charges more than a licensed esthetician or RN injector, and for PRP that premium is often justified. The blood draw, centrifuge calibration, and sterile technique all require clinical training. A poorly spun sample or contaminated PRP delivers poor results regardless of what you paid.

Location moves prices significantly. In cities like Beverly Hills, New York, and Miami, a microneedling-plus-PRP session routinely runs $1,000–$1,500. The same treatment in Dallas or Atlanta typically runs $600–$900. Volume, overhead, and market competition all play a role.

Add-ons can push costs up. Some providers include exosome treatments, RF microneedling, or LED therapy in the session. These combinations cost more (often $200–$500 extra) and aren't automatically better for every patient.

What Packages Usually Include

Most clinics offer 3-session bundles at a discount of 15–25% off the single-session rate. Some include a complimentary consultation, numbing cream, and a post-care kit. Before buying a package, confirm what happens if you only complete two sessions. Some clinics won't refund unused ones.

How Many Sessions You Actually Need

A single PRP facial session delivers noticeable improvement for most patients, but it's not the final result. Collagen remodeling takes time, and one treatment starts the process rather than completing it.

The standard protocol is 3 sessions spaced 4–6 weeks apart. This gives each treatment time to build on the last, with collagen production stacking across sessions. After the initial series, most providers recommend a maintenance session every 6–12 months.

If you have moderate to severe concerns — acne scarring, deeper lines, significant skin laxity — your provider may recommend starting with 4 sessions. Patients with mild concerns (early fine lines, dull texture) sometimes see satisfactory results from 2 sessions.

Budget for 3 sessions before committing. A single session at $800 tells you almost nothing about whether PRP works for your skin. Judging PRP by one treatment is like judging microneedling by the first session. You're seeing about 30% of the result.

Results: Timeline and How Long They Last

Most patients see initial improvement within 3–4 weeks of their first session. Redness and mild swelling resolve within 3–7 days after treatment, and skin starts looking smoother and more luminous as new collagen develops.

Peak results arrive at 3–6 months after completing the full initial series. Studies show patient satisfaction exceeds 90% at the 6-month mark, significantly higher than at the 4-week check-in after a single session.

Results typically last 12–18 months with consistent sun protection and a basic skincare routine. Some patients report benefits lasting closer to two years. Maintenance sessions every 6–12 months sustain the improvement without restarting a full series.

What PRP Actually Improves

  • Fine lines and wrinkles, especially around the eyes and mouth
  • Skin texture and pore appearance
  • Overall skin tone and luminosity
  • Mild acne scarring (moderate scarring requires more sessions or combination treatment)
  • Early skin laxity on the cheeks and neck

PRP does not deliver the lifting or contouring results you'd get from filler or RF microneedling. If your primary goal is volume replacement or significant tissue tightening, treatments like dermal fillers or Morpheus8 will likely outperform PRP alone.

Who Shouldn't Get a PRP Facial

Because PRP uses your own blood, it's generally considered a low-risk treatment. But there are real contraindications that make some people poor candidates.

Avoid PRP if you have: - Active acne, eczema, rosacea, or psoriasis flares (PRP can aggravate active inflammation) - A blood clotting disorder or thrombocytopenia (low platelet count) - Hepatitis C, HIV, or other bloodborne conditions that affect platelet quality - Active infection at or near the treatment area - Current use of blood-thinning medications (warfarin, therapeutic aspirin, NSAIDs) - Pregnancy or current breastfeeding

Proceed with caution if you have: - A history of keloid or hypertrophic scarring (the microneedling component carries added risk) - Used isotretinoin (Accutane) within the past 6 months - Significant active sun damage or a fresh sunburn on the treatment area

Any reputable provider will conduct a medical intake before drawing blood. If a clinic skips the health history and goes straight to the blood draw, that's a red flag.

PRP vs. Other Skin Treatments

PRP sits in a specific tier of skin rejuvenation, more aggressive than a HydraFacial but less intense than RF microneedling or laser resurfacing. Here's how it compares against the most common alternatives:

Treatment Cost Per Session Downtime Best For Results Last
PRP Facial (standalone)$400–$9001–3 daysGlow, mild texture6–12 months
Microneedling + PRP$600–$1,5003–5 daysTexture, fine lines, mild scarring12–18 months
Microneedling (no PRP)$250–$7003–5 daysTexture, pores, early lines6–12 months
Chemical Peel (medium)$150–$6005–10 daysTone, hyperpigmentation, texture3–6 months
HydraFacial$175–$450NoneHydration, congestion, glow4–6 weeks
RF Microneedling (Morpheus8)$800–$2,0005–7 daysLaxity, deeper lines, contouring18–24 months

The case for PRP over standard microneedling: randomized controlled trials show adding PRP to microneedling sessions significantly improves skin hydration, elasticity, and healing speed compared to microneedling alone. The cost increase of $200–$400 per session is real, but so is the performance gap.

The case against PRP, when something else fits better: if your primary concern is loose skin or deep folds, RF microneedlingdelivers more meaningful tissue remodeling through heat energy. If you're dealing with surface-level hyperpigmentation, a chemical peel may get you there faster at lower cost.

PRP is the right call when you want a biologically driven skin reset: collagen induction using your own growth factors, without the recovery time of a laser or the price of Morpheus8.

How to Find a Provider Worth Trusting

The skill of whoever runs your PRP session matters more than which clinic has the nicest lobby. Because PRP involves a blood draw and centrifuge, it requires clinical training that a standard facial does not. A few things to verify before booking:

Check credentials first. PRP should be performed or directly supervised by a licensed medical professional: NP, PA, RN, or physician. Some states allow estheticians to apply PRP topically, but the blood draw must involve a licensed clinician. Ask specifically who draws the blood and operates the centrifuge.

Ask about PRP concentration. The platelet concentration in a properly spun sample should be 3–5x higher than whole blood. Some discount providers use basic centrifuges that don't achieve this concentration, meaning you're getting subtherapeutic PRP at full price. Reputable providers use FDA-cleared centrifuge systems like Eclipse PRP or Arthrex ACP.

Check Google reviews and RealSelf for unsolicited patient experiences rather than relying on curated before-and-after galleries on clinic websites. Look specifically for reviews mentioning PRP results, not just general clinic satisfaction.

In major markets, verified providers offering microneedling with PRP are listed in cities like DallasMiamiChicago, and Los Angeles.

FAQ

Q: How much does a PRP facial cost?

A PRP facial costs $400–$900 per session for the topical-only version and $600–$1,500 for microneedling with PRP. Most providers recommend a series of three sessions, putting the total cost between $1,200 and $4,500 depending on location and which version you're getting. Package pricing can reduce the per-session rate by 15–25%.

Q: How long does a PRP facial last?

Results from a full series of microneedling with PRP typically last 12–18 months. The standalone topical PRP facial delivers shorter-duration benefits, usually 6–12 months. Maintenance sessions every 6–12 months sustain the results without needing a full restart.

Q: Is a PRP facial worth the cost?

For patients targeting fine lines, skin texture, and early laxity, the clinical data supports PRP's effectiveness: 87% satisfaction at 3 months and over 90% at 6 months. Whether it's worth it depends on your skin goals. PRP is not the right choice for significant volume loss or deep skin tightening. Within its category, the results-to-cost ratio is strong compared to non-PRP microneedling.

Q: How many PRP facial sessions do I need?

Most providers recommend an initial series of 3 sessions, spaced 4–6 weeks apart. Patients with mild concerns sometimes see acceptable results from 2 sessions; those with moderate acne scarring may need 4. After the initial series, one maintenance session per year is standard.

Q: What's the difference between a PRP facial and a vampire facial?

The terms are used interchangeably, though "vampire facial" typically refers to the combination of microneedling and PRP — the version popularized by Kim Kardashian. A "PRP facial" can mean either the topical-only treatment or the microneedling version. When booking, always confirm which protocol is included in the quoted price.

Q: Does a PRP facial hurt?

Most providers apply a topical numbing cream 30–45 minutes before the microneedling component. Patients typically report mild discomfort during the procedure, similar to a standard microneedling session. The blood draw is a routine venipuncture. Post-treatment, the face is red and sensitive for 3–7 days.

Q: Who is not a good candidate for a PRP facial?

PRP facials are not recommended for people with active acne, rosacea, or eczema flares; blood disorders or low platelet counts; HIV or hepatitis C; pregnancy; or those taking blood-thinning medications. A reputable clinic will conduct a full medical intake before proceeding.

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