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The 'New Man' Embraces Cosmetic Surgery

The 'New Man' Embraces Cosmetic Surgery

The demographics of cosmetic surgery are changing. For decades, the field was dominated by female patients — women seeking facelifts, breast augmentation, rhinoplasty, liposuction. That profile is shifting, and shifting faster than the industry expected.

Men now account for a growing share of cosmetic procedures, and the trend is accelerating. The American Society of Plastic Surgeons has tracked consistent year-over-year increases in male patients for minimally invasive procedures — Botox, fillers, chemical peels — as well as more significant surgeries like rhinoplasty, eyelid surgery, and gynecomastia (male breast reduction).

What is driving the change? Several factors appear to be converging. Workplace culture has shifted in ways that place higher premium on maintaining a youthful appearance for longer. The rise of video calling and the omnipresence of cameras in daily life have made people more conscious of how they look, and have removed some of the invisibility that men of previous generations could rely on as they aged. Social media has normalized both vanity and procedure in ways that have reduced the stigma for male patients.

There is also a generational shift. Younger men who grew up in a visual culture where grooming, skincare, and personal presentation were already more acceptable have fewer psychological barriers to cosmetic enhancement than their fathers did.

The result is an expanding male market that the cosmetic surgery industry is actively courting — marketing campaigns increasingly feature male patients, and clinics are hiring staff skilled at making male clients comfortable with conversations about appearance that an earlier generation would have found deeply awkward.

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