Dermal Fillers in Singapore 2026: Price Guide, Types and What to Expect
- Christina Lee

- Jun 3
- 6 min read
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Our medical aesthetics guides are written to be genuinely useful for Singapore residents with honest assessments, verified MOH-licensed clinics, and realistic 2026 pricing. Always consult a qualified doctor before undergoing any aesthetic procedure.

▶ Quick Answer: Dermal fillers in Singapore 2026: hyaluronic acid (HA) fillers cost SGD 600–1,200 per syringe. Most treatments use 1–3 syringes. Lip fillers SGD 600–1,000. Cheek fillers SGD 800–1,500. Collagen stimulators (Ellanse, Sculptra) are longer-lasting but cost more. Results last 6–18 months depending on product and area. Only HSA-registered fillers should be used — confirm with your doctor before treatment.
Dermal fillers in Singapore — what they are and what they do
Dermal fillers are injectable substances that restore volume, define contours, or soften wrinkles in the face. The most common type used in Singapore are hyaluronic acid (HA) fillers — a synthetic version of a substance naturally found in the skin that attracts and retains water, adding volume and hydration to the injected area. The result, when placed correctly by an experienced doctor, is a subtle and natural-looking change that is also reversible.
Unlike Botox which relaxes muscles, fillers add physical volume. They are used to restore volume lost through ageing, enhance features like lips and cheeks, soften the fold from nose to mouth corner, define the jawline, reduce hollowing under the eyes, and reshape the nose without surgery. The outcomes in experienced hands can be genuinely impressive. In inexperienced hands, they can produce an overfilled or unnatural appearance that is difficult to quickly undo — which is why the choice of doctor for filler treatment matters more than for almost any other aesthetic procedure.
Types of fillers available in Singapore 2026
Not all fillers work the same way. The major differences are mechanism, duration, and critically, reversibility — a distinction that becomes important if a result is unsatisfactory or a complication occurs.
Filler type | How it works | Duration | 2026 price range |
Hyaluronic acid (HA) — Juvederm, Restylane, Teosyal | The most common type in Singapore. Adds immediate volume. Fully reversible with hyaluronidase enzyme if needed. | 6 to 18 months depending on product viscosity and treatment area | SGD 600 to 1,200 per syringe |
Ellanse (polycaprolactone) | Stimulates your own collagen production rather than adding direct volume. Longer-lasting results. Not reversible with hyaluronidase. | 1 to 4 years depending on variant (E, M, L, or XL) | SGD 900 to 1,800 per syringe |
Sculptra (poly-L-lactic acid) | A gradual collagen stimulator. Results build over 3 to 6 months as new collagen forms. Best for global facial volume restoration rather than targeted contouring. | 2 to 3 years | SGD 800 to 1,500 per vial |
Radiesse (calcium hydroxylapatite) | Provides immediate volume and stimulates collagen. Denser than HA — used mainly for jawline, hands, and body contouring. | 12 to 18 months | SGD 800 to 1,500 per syringe |
Profhilo (high-concentration HA) | Classified as a skin booster rather than a volumising filler. Improves skin quality and adds subtle tissue remodelling rather than structural volume. | 3 to 6 months per course | SGD 700 to 1,000 per session |
Common treatment areas and 2026 costs in Singapore
The amount of filler needed varies significantly by individual anatomy, degree of volume loss, and treatment goals. The estimates below are for guidance — a proper assessment by your doctor will give you a more accurate picture.
Area | What filler does here | Typical amount needed | Estimated cost |
Lips | Adds volume, defines the lip border, corrects asymmetry | 0.5 to 1 syringe | SGD 400 to 1,200 |
Cheeks | Restores midface volume and lifts the lower face indirectly | 1 to 2 syringes per side | SGD 800 to 2,400 |
Nasolabial folds | Softens the creases running from the nose to the corners of the mouth | 1 to 2 syringes | SGD 600 to 1,500 |
Tear troughs (under eye) | Reduces the hollowing under the eyes that creates a shadow appearing as dark circles | 0.5 to 1 syringe per side | SGD 800 to 1,500 |
Jawline | Creates a sharper, more defined jaw contour — very popular in Singapore in 2026 | 2 to 4 syringes | SGD 1,200 to 3,000 |
Nose (non-surgical rhinoplasty) | Adds height to the nose bridge or refines the tip. Cannot reduce nose size. | 0.5 to 1 syringe | SGD 600 to 1,200 |
Chin | Projects the chin forward to improve facial proportion and balance | 1 to 2 syringes | SGD 600 to 1,500 |
Risks you need to understand before booking
Dermal fillers carry a higher risk profile than Botox because they involve larger volumes of material placed across more tissue compartments, some of which contain important blood vessels. The most serious complication — vascular occlusion — is rare but can cause tissue damage and, when it occurs near the eye, vision loss. Understanding these risks is not meant to discourage treatment but to ensure you choose an experienced doctor and ask the right questions.
• Vascular occlusion: occurs when filler is inadvertently injected into or compresses a blood vessel. Signs include sudden severe pain, blanching or mottling of the skin during or shortly after treatment. An experienced doctor will have hyaluronidase available immediately and will recognise and manage this complication. Ask before treatment: what is your protocol if vascular occlusion occurs?
• Tyndall effect: if HA filler is placed too superficially under thin skin, it creates a bluish discolouration. More common in the under-eye area. Reversible with hyaluronidase.
• Nodules and lumpiness: improperly placed or over-injected filler can form palpable lumps. Most resolve with time or gentle massage. Persistent cases may require hyaluronidase.
• Migration: filler can move from the original injection site over time, particularly in high-movement areas like the lips. This is more common with over-injection or superficial placement.
The tear trough (under-eye) area is the highest-risk zone for filler in the face — thin skin, proximity to blood vessels, and Tyndall effect risk combine here. It should only be treated by a doctor with specific, documented experience in this area. If a doctor offers to treat your tear troughs without a thorough assessment and explicit risk discussion, this is a concern.
What to look for in a filler doctor in Singapore
• APOC certification or demonstrable specific training in facial anatomy for injectables. For complex procedures like tear troughs, ask about volume of that specific procedure performed.
• Confirmation that the specific product being used is HSA-registered. Unregistered fillers do circulate in Singapore through grey market channels and carry unknown safety profiles.
• Hyaluronidase available on-site. Any clinic administering HA fillers must have hyaluronidase immediately accessible for emergency reversal.
• Before and after photos showing natural, proportionate results — not over-filled features or the same result applied uniformly across all patients.
Frequently asked questions
How long do dermal fillers last in Singapore's heat and humidity?
Heat and humidity do not materially affect filler longevity — the relevant factors are the product's HA concentration, its cross-linking density, the treatment area, and your individual metabolism. HA fillers in the lips tend to metabolise faster than in the cheeks or jawline due to the higher movement and vascularity of the area.
Can I dissolve fillers if I do not like the result?
HA fillers can be dissolved with hyaluronidase enzyme within hours. This is one of the primary reasons HA fillers are recommended for first-time patients. Collagen stimulators such as Ellanse and Sculptra cannot be dissolved and are permanent once placed — which is why they are typically reserved for patients with prior HA filler experience.
How much filler is too much?
There is no universal answer, but the red flag is when a doctor recommends treating multiple areas aggressively at a first appointment before assessing your response to the product. Most well-regarded injectors start conservatively — 1 to 2 syringes across one or two areas — and add volume at a follow-up if needed. The aim is always to look like a rested, slightly younger version of yourself, not a different person.
Is filler safe for Asian faces?
Yes — many of the most experienced filler practitioners in the world work in Singapore and across Asia. The considerations specific to Asian anatomy include preference for lower nose bridge augmentation, V-shape facial contouring, and careful under-eye treatment due to higher rates of Tyndall effect in thinner Asian under-eye skin. Choose a doctor with specific experience in Asian facial aesthetics.
Where to start for fillers in Singapore
Fillers are the aesthetic procedure where the doctor's specific credentials matter most. These two clinics are among Singapore's strongest for injectable technique and natural results.
Edwin Lim Medical Aesthetic Clinic — Lucky Plaza (Orchard), Changi City Point
Dr Edwin Lim holds an MSc in Practical Dermatology from Cardiff University with a specific research focus on pigmentary conditions in Asian skin, and MRCS Edinburgh. Two locations cover both the Orchard corridor and east Singapore. Consistently rated 4.9 stars across a large volume of Google reviews. Transparent pricing: Botox from approximately SGD 400 per area, fillers from SGD 800 per syringe.
Best for: patients wanting natural injectable results and specific expertise in Asian skin pigmentation from a doctor with postgraduate dermatology research credentials.
Sozo Aesthetic Clinic — One Raffles Place
Founded and led by Dr Justin Boey (Harvard Medical School, Queen Mary University of London), a certified physician trainer for Galderma, Sinclair, and Vivacy. Sozo is consistently noted for natural-looking injectable results driven by a less-is-more philosophy — a particularly important quality in fillers, where over-treatment is irreversible in the short term.
Best for: patients wanting refined, subtle injectable results from a doctor with international training and active trainer credentials.
See our complete medical aesthetics guide for the full Singapore treatment landscape and our Botox guide for injectable comparison.




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