Double Board Certified · Male Aesthetics

Male Buccal Fat Removal — sex-specific aesthetic considerations.

Buccal fat removal in men is a different conversation than in women. The lower face is broader, the bone is heavier, and over-thinning produces a gaunt look…

ABFPRS

Facial Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery

ABOto

Otolaryngology — Head & Neck Surgery

AAFPRS

Fellowship Director

Editorial pencil-sketch portrait — refined masculine lower face after conservative buccal fat reduction

In Consultation

"The masculine lower face tolerates very little reduction. A small change in the mirror is the right size of change."

A Note from Dr. Mourad

"Buccal fat removal in men is a different conversation than in women. The lower face is broader, the bone is heavier, and over-thinning produces a gaunt look that ages poorly. The right operation is conservative, well-staged, and individually evaluated."

— Dr. Moustafa Mourad, MD

Overview

What is male buccal fat removal?

Male buccal fat removal is a small intraoral procedure that reduces a portion of the buccal fat pad in the lower cheek to add definition to the mid-face and jawline. In men, the goal is typically angular contour and a clearer demarcation between the cheek and jaw — not the high-hollow look often pursued in other patients.

It is considered when persistent lower-cheek fullness softens the jawline at a normal weight, and when examination shows the fullness is anatomically due to the buccal pad rather than overall facial fat, prominent masseter, or skin laxity.

Conservative volume removal matters even more in male contouring. Over-resection produces a gaunt mid-face that does not age well; the aim is restraint, with the operation matched to long-term facial structure rather than a short-term trend.

An Established Academic Authority

Double board certification. Fellowship director. Published author. A surgeon's surgeon.

ABFPRS

Board Certified

American Board of Facial Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery

ABOto

Board Certified

American Board of Otolaryngology — Head & Neck Surgery

AAFPRS

Fellowship Director

American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery

Textbook

Published Author

Contributions to the academic literature of facial plastic surgery

Dual board certification in both Facial Plastic & Reconstructive Surgery and Otolaryngology — a combination held by a small number of physicians nationally.

02 · Ideal Candidates

Who benefits most from this operation.

Candidacy is determined together at consultation. The most satisfied patients share three things in common.

I

Full Lower Cheeks

Men with persistent lower-cheek fullness disproportionate to the rest of the face that does not change with body composition.

II

Mature Facial Structure

Generally late twenties or older, with stable adult facial proportions.

III

Conservative Goals

Men seeking subtle refinement of the lower cheek — never aggressive hollowing.

If this describes you, the next step is a quiet, unhurried conversation — not a sales call.

An Honest Note

When this operation may not be right for you.

Men under 25 with naturally thin mid-face fat — the procedure will age poorly.

Men seeking dramatic transformation are typically better served by chin or jawline augmentation.

Men whose dissatisfaction is rooted in body-image concerns benefit from a longer evaluation before any irreversible facial procedure.

Men who have lost significant weight recently should wait until weight is stable before considering removal.

03 · Approaches

Three paths to a defined lower face.

Male buccal fat removal is a conservative operation. The right plan depends on whether the goal is isolated cheek refinement or part of a broader jawline restructuring.

1 of 3 · Conservative Buccal Reduction

04 · Technique

Conservative vs combined approach.

Two paths through the same starting concern. The right choice depends on whether the issue is the cheek itself or the overall lower-face balance.

Pencil-sketch frontal view of a masculine face with the buccal fat pad outlined; a small red dotted line indicates a conservative partial removal preserving deep facial support.

Buccal Only

Partial reduction in the right patient

When the lower cheek fullness is the isolated concern and the chin and jawline are already well-balanced, a measured partial reduction is the right operation.

The change is modest and predictable. Over-reduction is avoided as a matter of principle.

Pencil-sketch profile view of a masculine face combining conservative buccal reduction with a chin implant overlay; red dotted markers show intra-oral incisions for both.

Combined

Chin or jawline augmentation paired

When the lower face would benefit more from added definition than from subtracted volume, a chin or jawline implant — sometimes paired with very conservative buccal reduction — produces a better-balanced result.

This is, in many male patients, the right answer to a question that was framed as "less" but is really about "more structure."

Illustrative diagrams. The right plan is determined together based on overall facial balance.

01 · Why Dr. Mourad

Diagnosis first, then a plan that fits.

Dr. Mourad approaches male buccal fat removal with deliberate restraint — the difference between an athletic-looking jawline and a hollow one is millimetres.

Patients are screened for natural mid-face fat distribution and projected facial aging trajectory.

When fuller jawline definition is the goal, jawline augmentation or chin work is often a better — and more reversible — first step than fat removal.

Begin the conversation

A careful, honest evaluation is the right first step.

Cost, Financing & Insurance

Male Buccal Fat Removal Cost, Financing & Insurance in NYC

The cost of male buccal fat removal depends on the surgical plan, whether it is combined with other facial contouring, the type of anesthesia, and the surgical setting. Candidacy is evaluated carefully to maintain natural masculine facial proportions.

Buccal fat removal is a cosmetic procedure and is typically self-pay. After consultation, our office provides a personalized estimate based on the recommended plan. Financing may be available for qualified patients through third-party healthcare financing providers.

What May Affect Cost

  • Whether performed alone or combined
  • Facial anatomy and goals
  • Type of anesthesia
  • Surgical setting
  • Postoperative care
  • Maintaining masculine proportions

This information is educational and is not a guarantee of pricing, insurance coverage, reimbursement, financing approval, or surgical candidacy. A personalized estimate is provided after consultation. Insurance coverage depends on the patient’s plan, medical necessity, documentation, and carrier requirements. Financing terms are determined by third-party financing providers.

05 · In Dr. Mourad's Words

Educational videos.

Short educational films and patient perspectives from the Manhattan practice.

Full Video Library

Dr. Mourad in Practice

An overview of the practice and philosophy.

Patient Perspective

A patient discusses her experience before, during, and after surgery.

Inside the Consultation

How Dr. Mourad evaluates anatomy, goals, and candidacy.

Before & After

Real results, real patients.

Every case is unique — tailored to individual anatomy and goals. Browse representative outcomes from the Manhattan practice.

Case 01
Case 02
Case 03
Case 04

06 · Recovery

What healing actually looks like.

Stage 01

First 24 Hours

Initial recovery focuses on rest, hydration, and following all post-operative instructions exactly. Pain is managed with multi-modal non-narcotic protocols where appropriate.

Stage 02

Week 1

Swelling and bruising peak in the first few days and improve steadily through the first week. Most patients are presentable for casual social activity by the end of week two.

Stage 03

Weeks 2 – 4

Through weeks two to four the early result begins to settle. Light cardio resumes around three weeks; vigorous exertion and contact activities are deferred per the operative plan.

Stage 04

Months 1 – 6

The final refined result emerges progressively over the following months as residual swelling continues to resolve. Follow-up visits are scheduled across the first year.

Have a specific question?

Send a brief note describing your anatomy or concerns — the office will route it directly to Dr. Mourad for review.

Pencil sketch portrait — balanced, prepared, considered

Before You Arrive

Your consultation, prepared.

Bring photographs relevant to your concern, when available.

Bring records from any prior surgery, when available.

List current medications, supplements, and blood-thinning agents.

Note any prior anesthesia issues or chronic medical conditions.

Allow 60 minutes for the first consultation.

Bring questions; no decisions are made at the first visit.

Frequently Asked

Patient questions, honestly answered.

The buccal fat pad is a discrete deep cheek compartment adjacent to the buccinator muscle. In men, its volume influences how the cheek projects against the jaw and chin. The pad has lobes and extensions that determine surface contour changes after excision. Clinical examination and standardized photos help distinguish pad prominence from superficial fat. An in‑person consultation is required to determine if excision is appropriate.

The Most Important Step

Your expert consultation.

A careful evaluation by a double board-certified physician is the right first step. The conversation is unhurried, the diagnosis is honest, and the operative plan is built around what your anatomy can sustain and what you actually want.

Editorial review status. This page is a structural placeholder for the WordPress rebuild. All clinical copy is flagged for physician and attorney sign-off prior to launch. No outcome is guaranteed; individual results vary.