Chin Augmentation

Surgical
Permanence
Implants are permanent unless removed; sliding genioplasty bony repositioning is permanent; filler is reversible (12–24 month duration)
Downtime Days
5–7 days for implant; 10–14 days for genioplasty; same-day for filler. Compression or tape for implant 1–2 weeks; soft diet 2–3 weeks for genioplasty
Anesthesia
General anesthesia or sedation for implant; general anesthesia for genioplasty; topical for filler
Cost Range K R W
₩400,000 – ₩12,000,000 (filler to genioplasty)
Cost Range U S D
$300 – $9,100
Min Trip Days
5
Optimal Trip Days
7
Age Min
Generally 18+ once skeletal growth complete; some Korean clinics prefer 20+ for elective surgical implant placement

What might surprise you

  • Filler-based chin augmentation is genuinely good for the right indication. Hyaluronic acid filler placed in the chin area can produce a meaningful 2–4mm projection increase that lasts 12–24 months. The procedure takes 15 minutes, costs a fraction of surgical augmentation, and is fully reversible. Patients uncertain about projection commitment often start with filler and either renew it indefinitely or decide based on their experience whether to pursue surgery.
  • Sliding genioplasty is more available in Korea than in most Western markets. The implant-vs-genioplasty conversation in Western consultation rooms often defaults to implant due to surgeon training pathways; Korean specialist clinics offer both pathways and the genioplasty option is more genuinely on the menu. Patients seeking the autologous-bone option (no foreign material; three-dimensional repositioning capability) are particularly well-served by Korean specialist practice.
  • Profile balance matters more than absolute chin projection. A chin can be objectively underprojected and still look appropriate if the rest of the facial proportions accommodate it; conversely, a normal chin can look underprojected against a dominant nose. Korean specialist consultation typically addresses profile balance rather than chin projection in isolation; combined chin-plus-rhinoplasty cases address the whole-profile question rather than each feature independently.
  • Korean implant material preferences differ from US norms. Silicone implants dominate Korean practice; MEDPOR (porous polyethylene) is available but less common than in some US markets. The material decision affects palpability, infection risk, and revision difficulty; ask about the specific material recommended and why.
  • Mentalis muscle dysfunction is the most-overlooked surgical risk. The mentalis muscle (chin dimpling muscle) attaches to the bone in the area where implant or genioplasty work happens. Dissection and reattachment matter; poor reattachment can produce 'witch's chin' (visible chin retraction with smiling) or chin ptosis (sagging soft tissue beneath the chin). This is rare in trained hands but worth asking about explicitly.

Chin augmentation — known clinically as chin implant placement (alloplastic augmentation) or sliding genioplasty (autologous bony augmentation), in Korean as 턱끝 보형물 or 턱끝 수술 — addresses chin underprojection through implant placement or chin-bone repositioning. The procedure is one of the highest-volume and lowest-complication facial bone or implant procedures in Korean cosmetic practice and produces some of the highest patient-satisfaction rates per dollar in K-beauty surgery. Korean clinics handle the full range of techniques: silicone or porous polyethylene implants (MEDPOR), Gore-Tex (ePTFE), sliding genioplasty (using the patient's own chin bone), and filler-based non-surgical augmentation as a non-permanent alternative.

Korean practice has its own character. Conservative chin projection sizes are favored over the more dramatic projection common in some Western cosmetic markets. Implant materials and shapes are selected for the specific facial proportions of each patient rather than offered as one-size-fits-all. Sliding genioplasty (the autologous-bone alternative) is more widely available in Korean specialist practice than in many Western markets where the implant pathway dominates. Combined-procedure offerings (chin augmentation plus rhinoplasty for profile balance, or chin augmentation plus jaw contouring for V-line) are common in single anesthesia events.

The procedure addresses chin underprojection (microgenia or retrogenia), profile imbalance with otherwise-appropriate skeletal pattern, and the chin component of comprehensive jaw and chin reshaping. It does not address skeletal Class II or III malocclusion (the domain of orthognathic surgery; see the double jaw surgery guide) or chin reduction (the domain of reduction genioplasty; see the chin reduction-genioplasty guide). Patients with vertical chin excess plus underprojection sometimes need both reduction and augmentation in coordinated planning.

This guide covers what chin augmentation does in the Korean clinical context, the implant-vs-genioplasty-vs-filler decision, what each option realistically costs in Gangnam, the recovery arc through 6-month settlement, candidacy assessment, the complication considerations that differ meaningfully between implant and genioplasty pathways, and the questions that separate a thoughtful consultation from a high-volume operation.

What chin augmentation is (and is not)

Chin augmentation increases chin projection through one of three approaches: implant placement, sliding genioplasty, or filler-based volume addition. The three approaches address the same cosmetic concern but differ substantially in invasiveness, durability, reversibility, and cost.

Implant materials in current Korean practice:

  • Silicone — smooth or textured solid silicone implants. Most common Korean choice. Easy to place; easy to revise or remove; well-tolerated. Some risk of bone resorption beneath the implant over years.
  • MEDPOR (porous polyethylene) — semi-rigid implant with porous surface allowing tissue ingrowth. Less migration than silicone; harder to remove if revision needed; higher infection risk if infection develops. Less common in Korean practice than in some US markets.
  • Gore-Tex (ePTFE) — soft, conforming implant with surface that allows some tissue ingrowth. Conforms well to bone; harder to revise than silicone but easier than MEDPOR. Limited Korean availability.
  • Allogenic bone graft — donor bone material. Less common; specific cases.

Sliding genioplasty (autologous bone repositioning):

  • Horizontal osteotomy of the chin segment via intraoral incision (Korean surgeons overwhelmingly prefer the intraoral approach over external for both implant and genioplasty); the freed segment is repositioned (forward, vertically, or lateral) and fixed with plates and screws. Typically performed by oral and maxillofacial surgeons or by plastic surgeons specifically trained in facial-bone procedures; general cosmetic clinics may default to implant rather than offering genioplasty.
  • Allows three-dimensional control unavailable with implants (forward + vertical + lateral; implants only provide forward + some vertical via shape selection).
  • No foreign material; uses the patient's own bone.
  • Permanent and not reversible without revision surgery (which is more invasive than implant removal).
  • Higher technical demand; longer surgery; longer recovery; mental nerve injury risk.

Filler-based augmentation (non-surgical):

  • Hyaluronic acid filler injected into the chin area to add volume and projection.
  • Immediate result; 15-minute procedure; topical or no anesthesia.
  • Lasts 12–24 months depending on filler product and patient metabolism.
  • Reversible with hyaluronidase if outcome is unsatisfactory.
  • Limited maximum augmentation (typically 2–4mm projection); not equivalent to surgical augmentation for substantial change.

Chin augmentation is not the same as orthognathic surgery (double jaw surgery). Augmentation increases chin projection without addressing skeletal jaw relationships; orthognathic surgery moves both maxilla and mandible to address skeletal malocclusion. Patients with skeletal Class II or III patterns generally need orthognathic surgery rather than chin augmentation alone.

Chin augmentation is also not the same as chin reduction (reduction genioplasty). Reduction addresses chin overprojection or vertical excess; augmentation addresses underprojection. Patients needing both vertical reduction and forward augmentation typically benefit from sliding genioplasty (which can do both in a single operation) rather than implant.

What patients actually report

Our reviews database holds limited Korean-clinic chin augmentation entries directly tagged. Patterns below are aggregated from international forums (RealSelf chin augmentation boards, Reddit r/PlasticSurgery), Korean platforms, and peer-reviewed satisfaction literature.

Implant chin augmentation has consistently high satisfaction rates. Patient-reported satisfaction at 6 months is among the highest of any cosmetic procedure (typically 90%+ in published cohorts) when case selection is appropriate. The procedure is straightforward, the recovery is short, and the outcome is visible immediately and stable from week 4.

Sliding genioplasty patients report higher satisfaction with three-dimensional outcomes. Reviewers who chose sliding genioplasty over implant for cases with vertical-excess-plus-underprojection or asymmetry describe better outcomes than they expect implants would have produced. The trade-off is the longer recovery (10–14 days vs 5–7 for implant) and higher procedure cost.

Filler-as-trial users report this approach as outcome-helpful. Patients uncertain about projection commitment who tried filler first describe the experience as informative; some renewed indefinitely, some decided to pursue surgery, some decided no augmentation was needed. The reversibility removes the irreversibility-anxiety that affects some implant-vs-genioplasty decisions.

Combined chin-plus-rhinoplasty satisfaction is meaningfully higher than chin-alone or rhinoplasty-alone in profile-imbalance cases. Reviewers with prominent-nose-plus-underprojected-chin pattern who addressed both report 'whole face' satisfaction; reviewers who addressed only one component sometimes describe partial satisfaction with proportional concerns persisting.

The filtered chin augmentation reviews show what we have today.

Cautions from clinical practice

Chin augmentation has well-characterized complication profiles that differ meaningfully between the three approaches.

Implant complications:

  • Implant migration. Movement of the implant from intended position. Reported in 2–8% of silicone cases; lower in MEDPOR and Gore-Tex (tissue ingrowth limits movement). Mild migration accepted; significant migration requires repositioning revision.
  • Implant palpability. Patient perception of the implant edges through the soft tissue. Reported in 5–15% of cases, varying with implant size, soft-tissue thickness, and material. Most accept this; significant palpability may need revision to softer or smaller implant.
  • Infection. Reported under 2% acute, but late infection (months to years post-op) occurs in up to 1–2% of implants over their lifetime. Severe infection generally requires implant removal and replacement after healing. MEDPOR infections are particularly difficult to clear (porous structure harbors bacteria).
  • Bone resorption. The bone beneath the implant remodels over years from chronic pressure, producing some bone loss (typically 1–3mm over 10+ years; more common with larger silicone implants). Generally clinically silent; rarely affects outcome but can complicate revision if the implant is removed and replaced after substantial resorption.
  • Mentalis muscle dysfunction. Improper dissection and reattachment of the mentalis can produce visible chin retraction with smiling ('witch's chin') or chin soft-tissue ptosis. Reported under 5% in trained hands.
  • Sensory disturbance. Mental nerve numbness or hypersensitivity in the lower lip and chin. Reported in 5–15% temporary; under 2% permanent.
  • Asymmetry. Implant slightly off-center or differential bone resorption can produce asymmetric outcome. Reported in 3–10%.

Sliding genioplasty complications:

  • Mental nerve injury. The mental nerve exits the mandible just below the canine tooth root and can be affected during osteotomy. Reported temporary numbness near-universal; permanent partial numbness 2–5% in trained-hand cohorts.
  • Malunion or nonunion. Failed bone healing at the osteotomy. Rare (under 2%) but serious.
  • Asymmetry. Differential repositioning produces asymmetric outcome. Reported in 3–8%.
  • Hardware sensitivity / exposure. Plates and screws may become palpable or expose through gum tissue. Reported in 1–5%.
  • Bony overhang or step deformity. The osteotomy line may be visible or palpable. Reported in 2–8%; addressable with smoothing burr.
  • Mentalis muscle dysfunction. Same as implant pathway; reported under 5%.

Filler complications:

  • Asymmetry or contour irregularity. Most addressable with hyaluronidase or follow-up filler placement.
  • Vascular events (rare but serious). Intra-arterial injection can produce skin necrosis or vision loss; appropriate technique (cannulae rather than sharp needles, slow injection) substantially reduces risk.
  • Inflammatory nodules or biofilm. Reported rarely; generally addressable with hyaluronidase.
  • Migration (filler). Filler can migrate from the placement site; less common in chin than in some other areas.

The complication conversation should be specific to the chosen approach. Patients pursuing implant vs genioplasty vs filler face quite different risk profiles.

Implant vs genioplasty vs filler — the decision framework

The right approach depends on case characteristics rather than blanket clinic preference.

ApproachBest fit forTradeoffs
Silicone implantStandard underprojection cases; lower-budget preference; reversibility preferenceMigration risk; palpability risk; bone resorption over years
MEDPOR implantCases prioritizing migration resistance; longer-term commitmentHarder revision; harder infection clearing; less commonly offered in Korea
Gore-Tex implantCases prioritizing soft conformability; specific anatomiesLimited Korean availability; intermediate revision difficulty
Sliding genioplastyThree-dimensional augmentation needs (forward + vertical + lateral); no-foreign-material preference; combined with vertical reduction; significant asymmetryHigher technical demand; longer recovery; mental nerve risk; harder revision; higher cost
Filler (HA)Trial-of-volume; modest projection goal; reversibility preference; cost-consciousLimited maximum augmentation; 12–24 month duration; not equivalent for substantial change

Combined-procedure considerations:

  • Chin + rhinoplasty — Profile-balance approach for prominent-nose-plus-underprojected-chin pattern. Common Korean combination.
  • Chin + jaw contouring — Comprehensive lower-face reshaping. Combined V-line surgery sometimes adds zygoma reduction for full three-zone work.
  • Chin + lip lift or other facial procedures — Less common but case-specific.

Patients should ask explicitly which approach is recommended and why. A surgeon who articulates trade-offs is operating in planning-driven mode; one who pushes a single approach without considering alternatives may be operating in template mode.

Cost in Gangnam

Chin augmentation pricing varies substantially by approach. The numbers below are clinic-quoted ranges as of 2026:

ProcedureKRW rangeUSD rangeNote
Chin filler (HA, single session)₩400,000 – ₩900,000$300 – $700Reversible 12–24 month augmentation
Silicone implant chin augmentation₩2,500,000 – ₩5,000,000$1,900 – $3,800Most common Korean choice
MEDPOR implant chin augmentation₩3,500,000 – ₩6,500,000$2,700 – $5,000Less common; somewhat higher cost
Gore-Tex implant chin augmentation₩4,000,000 – ₩7,000,000$3,000 – $5,300Limited availability
Sliding genioplasty₩6,000,000 – ₩12,000,000$4,500 – $9,100Autologous bone; three-dimensional
Chin + rhinoplasty combined₩6,000,000 – ₩15,000,000$4,500 – $11,500Profile-balance package
Chin + jaw contouring (V-line)₩10,000,000 – ₩20,000,000$7,600 – $15,200Comprehensive lower-face
Implant exchange or removal₩2,000,000 – ₩4,000,000$1,500 – $3,000If revision needed

For comparison: equivalent chin implant in the US typically runs $3,000–$6,000+; sliding genioplasty $7,000–$15,000; UK £2,000–£5,000 implant, £5,000–£12,000 genioplasty. The Korean tier is meaningfully below US/UK pricing for sliding genioplasty in particular; for implant cases, the absolute savings vs Western markets are smaller. Combined-procedure trips (chin + rhinoplasty or chin + jaw contouring) offer better trip-economics than chin-alone.

Recovery, day by day

Recovery differs meaningfully between implant, genioplasty, and filler approaches.

Implant recovery:

WindowWhat you'll seeWhat you can do
Procedure dayAnesthesia recovery; tape or compression on chin; some bruising and swellingDischarge same day; some clinics overnight
Day 1–3Swelling and bruising; chin stiffness; mild discomfort managed with prescribed medicationLight activity; soft diet; first clinic check day 1–2
Day 4–7Bruising fading; swelling decreasing; able to do desk workLight desk work; sutures removed at day 5–7; clinic check
Day 7–14Most visible swelling resolved; safe to fly home around day 7Normal social activity; resume normal eating
Week 2–6Subtle residual swelling; chin feels normalResume full activity at week 2–4
Month 3–6Final outcome stableLong-term assessment

Sliding genioplasty recovery:

WindowWhat you'll seeWhat you can do
Procedure dayGeneral anesthesia recovery; significant chin and lower-face swelling; soft/liquid dietHospital observation; some clinics 1 night
Day 1–3Substantial swelling; numbness in lower lip and chin; restricted diet (liquid then soft)Limited activity; first clinic check day 1–2
Day 4–10Swelling resolving; speech and chewing improving; transition from prescription to OTC pain medicationLight desk work; soft diet; suture removal at day 7–10
Day 10–14Most visible swelling resolved; safe to fly home; numbness persistingResume normal social activity; soft-medium diet
Week 2–6Bone healing well underway; numbness improving slowlyResume normal eating gradually; light activity
Month 3–12Final outcome stable; numbness usually resolvesLong-term assessment

Filler recovery: Same-day procedure; mild swelling and bruising for 1–3 days; final result visible by 2 weeks; no formal recovery period.

Trip duration: minimum 5 days for implant or filler; 10–14 days for genioplasty. Combined procedures (chin + rhinoplasty) require longer stays per the rhinoplasty timeline.

The 10 questions to ask in your consultation

Suggested questions for your chin augmentation consultation. The approach-decision and case-fit questions are the highest-impact decisions.

  1. Implant, sliding genioplasty, or filler — which do you recommend for my case, and why? The honest answer references your specific anatomy, projection magnitude, profile balance, and reversibility preferences.
  2. What implant material (silicone, MEDPOR, Gore-Tex) if implant is recommended, and why? Material affects palpability, infection risk, revision difficulty.
  3. What's the planned projection in mm and direction (forward / vertical / lateral)? Specific numbers should be available; vague 'natural augmentation' is not adequate.
  4. Do you recommend chin alone or combined with rhinoplasty, jaw contouring, or other procedures for profile balance? Honest answer addresses your specific profile concerns rather than always pushing combination or always staying single-zone.
  5. What's your protocol for mentalis muscle reattachment? Important question to identify clinics that handle this well; absence of substantive answer is a flag.
  6. What's your reported migration / palpability / infection rate at 1 and 5 years for implant cases? Specialist clinics may have published or internal data.
  7. If sliding genioplasty: what's your mental nerve permanent injury rate? Specialist clinics may have data.
  8. Have you considered filler as a trial before committing to surgical augmentation? An honest surgeon will sometimes recommend filler-first; clinics that always push surgery may be operating in volume mode.
  9. What's the all-in price including consultation, surgery, anesthesia, hospital fee, post-op care, and follow-up? Get the full-stack number.
  10. What's your revision protocol if I'm dissatisfied or develop complications? The clinic's framing reveals long-arc orientation.

Choosing a clinic

Chin augmentation is offered by general plastic surgery clinics across Gangnam. The technique is established enough that surgeon volume requirements are lower than for some specialty procedures, though dedicated facial-bone specialists handle more complex genioplasty cases.

  • Board-certified plastic surgeon with chin-augmentation case volume — implant cases are widely handled; genioplasty cases concentrate at facial-bone specialist clinics.
  • Multiple approach availability — clinics that offer only implant or only genioplasty without honest comparison of alternatives may be operating in single-modality mode.
  • Multiple implant material options — silicone is universal; MEDPOR and Gore-Tex available at premium-tier clinics for cases where they're appropriate.
  • Documented technique and outcome protocols — pre-procedure photos in standardized angles, planned projection in mm, post-op tracking at 3, 6, 12 months.
  • Mentalis muscle reattachment protocol — clinics that articulate this clearly are operating with the technique-detail awareness that matters.
  • Hospital-grade operating facility for genioplasty — appropriate for the surgical scope; cosmetic-clinic grade may be appropriate for implant-only cases.
  • Filler offerings as part of the conversation — clinics that recommend filler-first for some cases are operating in patient-best-interest mode rather than always pushing surgery.
  • Combined-procedure capability — for patients pursuing chin + rhinoplasty or chin + jaw contouring.

The filtered clinic directory shows current matches.

Risks, complications, and what a safe clinic looks like

The published AE rates for chin augmentation in trained Korean hands sit roughly here, by approach: implant cases — migration 2–8%, palpability 5–15%, acute infection under 2%, late infection 1–2% over implant lifetime, bone resorption 1–3mm over 10+ years (clinically silent), mentalis dysfunction under 5%, sensory disturbance 5–15% temporary / under 2% permanent, asymmetry 3–10%; sliding genioplasty — mental nerve permanent injury 2–5%, malunion under 2%, asymmetry 3–8%, hardware sensitivity 1–5%, bony step deformity 2–8%, mentalis dysfunction under 5%; filler — vascular events under 0.01% (rare but serious; cannula technique reduces risk), inflammatory nodules rare, asymmetry/irregularity addressable with hyaluronidase.

Recognition. Patient-side signals worth knowing for implant: rapid one-sided swelling, redness, or fever in first 2 weeks (potential acute infection — needs immediate clinic contact); persistent firmness, asymmetry, or implant feel different at 3+ months (potential migration or late issue); chin retraction with smiling at 3+ months (potential mentalis dysfunction). For genioplasty: persistent severe lower-lip and chin numbness at 12+ months (likely permanent mental nerve injury); inability to fully close lips or smile asymmetry. For filler: vision changes during or shortly after injection (immediate emergency — vascular occlusion).

Documentation. Pre-procedure photos in standardized angles; planned projection in mm; implant material, size, and lot number for implant cases; intra-operative documentation; post-op photos at 1 week, 6 weeks, 3 months, 6 months, 12 months. Clinics that maintain this protocol are operating in outcome-tracking mode.

Who is a good candidate (and who is not)

Chin augmentation candidacy varies by approach. The general profile is age 18+ with chin underprojection (microgenia or retrogenia) or profile-balance concerns; in good general health; with realistic expectations grounded in the relevant timeline; with appropriate medical clearance.

Reasons to delay or skip:

  • Skeletal Class II or Class III malocclusion. Chin augmentation alone in patients with significant skeletal malocclusion produces incomplete cosmetic results; orthognathic surgery is the appropriate procedure. Honest consultation with both a plastic surgeon and an orthodontist may be appropriate.
  • Vertical chin excess. Patients with long chin plus underprojection often benefit more from sliding genioplasty (which can shorten and advance simultaneously) than from implant.
  • Active mentalis dysfunction or chin ptosis. Existing soft-tissue concerns may be exacerbated by augmentation; address pre-existing concerns first.
  • Active dental disease. Active periodontal disease or untreated infections in the area should be resolved before elective implant placement (infection risk).
  • Significant medical comorbidities. Active autoimmune conditions, bleeding disorders, severe cardiovascular disease, or other systemic conditions require evaluation and stabilization.
  • Active smoking. Smoking impairs healing; cessation 4–6 weeks pre and post procedure typically required.
  • Unrealistic expectations. Patients seeking dramatic transformation from a procedure that's inherently subtle (chin augmentation produces meaningful but not dramatic change) are mismatched in expectation.
  • Body dysmorphia or unstable expectations. Repeated revision-seeking patterns warrant pre-surgical psychological assessment.

Patients uncertain about commitment should consider filler-as-trial. Patients with skeletal malocclusion patterns should consider orthognathic consultation before committing to chin augmentation alone.

When to travel and how long to stay

Trip duration depends on chosen approach.

Filler: same-day to 2 days. Procedure plus optional next-day check; many international patients combine with other Korea trip activities.

Implant: 5–7 days. Procedure (Day 1) + 4–6 days recovery + suture removal + clearance to fly. Most travel-friendly surgical chin augmentation indication.

Sliding genioplasty: 10–14 days. Procedure + recovery + suture removal + bone-stability before flying. More substantial recovery than implant.

Combined procedures (chin + rhinoplasty, chin + jaw contouring): Trip duration follows the longer-recovery component (typically rhinoplasty 7–10 days; jaw contouring 14–21 days).

Long-arc follow-up: 3 and 6 month checks via remote photo submission; 12-month check optional for implant cases, useful for genioplasty cases. Implant exchange or removal, if needed, typically scheduled at 12+ months as outpatient procedure.

Touch-up sessions: Filler renewal at 12–24 months; implant revision at 6+ months if needed; genioplasty revision at 12+ months if needed.

Tax refund, cash discount, and seasonal deals

Three layers of price reduction stack at most clinics:

VAT refund. Up to 10% of the procedure cost, recoverable at Incheon Airport for foreigners on tourist visas — but only at clinics registered with Korea's Medical Tourist Tax Refund program. Cosmetic chin augmentation generally qualifies. Either Global Tax Free or KT Tourism Tax Refund handles most refunds.

Cash discount. Typically 5–10%. On a ₩4,000,000 ($3,000) implant case, this is ₩200,000–₩400,000 ($150–$300).

Seasonal promotions. Some clinics offer modest discounts on combined-procedure packages (chin + rhinoplasty bundles).

Currency exchange: Pricing in KRW typically locked at booking; minor benefit/risk from USD-to-KRW movement over 3–6 month booking horizon.

Alternatives to consider instead

Chin augmentation is the right answer for chin underprojection or profile-balance concerns. If your case is something else, consider these alternatives:

  • Skeletal malocclusion with chin underprojection. Orthognathic surgery (double jaw surgery) addresses the skeletal pattern as well as chin position; chin augmentation alone produces incomplete results.
  • Chin overprojection or vertical excess. Reduction genioplasty (the opposite procedure) addresses chin reduction; chin augmentation goes the wrong direction.
  • Profile-balance concerns with prominent nose. Rhinoplasty addresses the nose; combined chin + rhinoplasty often produces better profile-balance outcome than chin alone.
  • Mild concerns / commitment hesitancy. Filler-based augmentation provides reversible trial-of-volume without surgical commitment.
  • Substantial three-dimensional reshaping needs. Sliding genioplasty handles forward + vertical + lateral simultaneously; implant cannot.
  • Mentalis dysfunction or chin ptosis. Address pre-existing soft-tissue concerns first before adding augmentation.
  • Non-treatment. Modest chin underprojection is sometimes a feature rather than a problem; patients reassessing after consultation may choose acceptance. Legitimate outcome.

A serious chin augmentation consultation will sometimes recommend orthognathic referral, rhinoplasty combination, filler-first trial, sliding genioplasty over implant, or non-treatment. That signals an outcome-focused practice.

The bottom line

The case for Gangnam for chin augmentation is moderate — the procedure is widely available globally, technique sophistication is broadly comparable across markets for implant cases, and Western pricing is not as far above Korean pricing as for some major procedures. The main 'why Korea' arguments are: sliding genioplasty is more genuinely on the menu in Korean specialist consultation than in many Western markets where the implant pathway dominates surgeon training; combined-procedure trips (chin + rhinoplasty for profile balance, or chin + jaw contouring for V-line) are easier to coordinate in Korean specialist practice; and pricing is meaningfully below US/UK levels for genioplasty cases in particular.

The case against is that chin augmentation is one of the K-beauty procedures where the absolute price savings vs Western markets often don't cover travel cost for chin-alone cases. Patients pursuing chin augmentation in isolation may find that home-country options are reasonable; the Korea trip math is more favorable for combined-procedure cases.

The patients for whom Gangnam chin augmentation is most clearly the right call are those pursuing combined procedures (chin + rhinoplasty, chin + jaw contouring); those specifically seeking sliding genioplasty rather than implant (Korean specialist availability is a meaningful advantage); those uncertain between approaches who want substantive consultation with a surgeon comfortable with all three modalities; and those already coming to Korea for other procedures who add chin augmentation as a related component.

If you do come, four practical notes. First, take the implant-vs-genioplasty-vs-filler conversation seriously; the right answer varies meaningfully by case, and Korean specialist clinics genuinely offer all three. Second, plan trip duration appropriately by chosen approach; implant 5–7 days, genioplasty 10–14 days, filler 1–2 days. Third, profile-balance considerations matter; if your concern is whole-face proportion rather than chin in isolation, consider whether combined chin + rhinoplasty is the right answer. Fourth, filler-as-trial is genuinely useful for commitment-hesitant patients and Korean clinics readily offer this.

Chin augmentation is a procedure where Korean specialist availability of multiple approaches creates value for patients who want genuine modality choice; the dollar economics matter less here than for some major procedures. The consultation conversation that matters most is the approach-selection conversation, not the pricing conversation.

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