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Neck Anxiety Is Getting Younger

Younger people than ever are identifying their neck as a ‘problem area.’ Beauty brands are rushing to cater to them before they decide to go under the knife.
Two women touch their necks.
The popularity of neck lifts among patients in their 30s is growing at over twice the average pace. (Shutterstock)

Key insights

  • Younger consumers than ever are increasingly anxious about their necks, driving a surge in neck-focused skincare, devices and treatments as beauty brands race to meet demand.
  • Interest in neck lifts is rising quickly among patients in their 30s, fuelled by social-media transparency, desire for subtle results and limits of non-surgical options.

Kat James, the first over-50 influencer to amass one million followers on TikTok, thinks of her followers as a database she can tap to predict the next big beauty trend. “I have thousands and thousands of comments a day, and you see how those comments shift,” she said. “In the last year, it’s all been skincare. One of the most asked questions in my DMs is: ‘What can I do about my neck?’”

Insecurity about the region is nothing new, and was canonised two decades ago by Nora Ephron, but the Zoom era has renewed anxieties. “Tech neck”, a term which describes muscular tension or horizontal wrinkles from poor posture when using devices, recently hit an all-time search traffic peak according to Trendalytics.

What is new is how the area is a focus for ever younger patients, who have been taught about the difference between their face and neck skin and are spending on products and procedures to solve what they see as a problem area.

Dr Lesley Rabach, a facial plastic surgeon in New York, has noticed both an uptick in isolated neck lifts and a younger skew to its prospective patient. In the first decade of her career, Rabach didn’t lift the neck unless it was part of a facelift. “But in these really young patients you can make the neck and jawline so tight,” she said.

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Searches for “neck cream” ballooned by over 60 percent in the last year, per data from analytics firm Spate, and neck lifts have been on the rise since the pandemic, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. But for patients in their 30s, a cohort that had 9.5 percent more neck lifts than 2022, that rise is outpacing the average by more than double.

Due to transparency around procedures across social media, stigma around plastic surgery and tweakments are softening — particularly among younger cohorts. In Sept. 2025, aesthetician Sofie Pavitt wrote an essay for The Cut that shared her reasoning behind and experience of undergoing a neck lift at 41. Rabach, who performed Pavitt’s surgery, said this increase of people willing to talk about their surgery is common. “People care a bit less if people know,” she said.

The lift can also be attributed to demand for “undetectable” procedures. At between $10,000 and $15,000 on average, a neck lift can cost a fraction of a facelift, but offers a dramatic refresh. While the majority of her patients are female, Dr Rabach shared one in four of her patients are men. “Men in New York City work in professions where every year there’s young guys coming in,” she said. “They want to stay looking youthful. And men equate youthfulness with a sharp jawline and a lot of hair.”

Beyond Surgery

Skincare brands see plenty of neck opportunity beyond the knife, said Anne-Catherine Auvray, executive beauty editor at marketing and trend forecasting platform Beauty Streams, citing the advent of not only neck-specific serums, creams and masks but also devices that use heat or electricity to stimulate the muscles in the skin, and aim to promote collagen production.

Luxury incumbents like La Mer and Clarins, and professional labels like StriVectin and Alastin have dominated the neck cream category for years. But newer launches like Trinny London’s The Elevator and Beauty Pie’s Über Youth Super Lift serum-spray have also found success in the region.

Sheet mask brand Patchology has opted for a different approach with a silicone neck and décolleté patch, targeting younger consumers who’ve already been won by and incorporated pimple and under-eye patches into their weekly routines. Neck masks in general are an area that both James and Auvray see as ripe for innovation. “Not only is the scar-healing potential of silicone quite promising, it’s also a great entry-level price point for that consumer that you’re beginning to see,” said James. Trendalytics head of trends Kendall Becker said that Dr. Jart+, Solawave and 111Skin are also finding success in neck masks, and predicts that the category will only continue to grow over the next year.

Patchology Firm Believer Patch
Firm Believer retails for $12 — a far more accessible price point than products from Clarins and La Mer, which start at around $100. (Patchology)

Physicians offices and med spas will also have other non-surgical treatment options, including Botox to relax neck bands and soften the horizontal lines caused by “tech neck.” But both Pavitt in her essay and James the influencer understand that for the neck — where the skin is thin and can’t be targeted with active ingredients like acid peels — options besides surgery have their limitations.

“There’s only so much a topical can do,” James added.

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Further Reading

Gen Z’s New Humble Brag? Plastic Surgery.

‘They’re taking selfies of their plastic surgery appointments as if it’s a concert or a ‘get ready with me’ video,’ said one plastic surgeon. ‘They want everyone to know.’

Why Young Women Are Getting Facelifts

Customers in their 20s and 30s are being driven towards this invasive surgery by ‘filler fatigue’, the use of weight-loss drugs and the development of new surgical techniques.

About the author
Rachael Griffiths
Rachael Griffiths

Rachael Griffiths is a Senior Editorial Associate at The Business of Beauty. She is based between St Helens and London, and covers beauty, wellness and industry news.

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