Most pages give you a vague range. This is the actual data. The average facelift cost in Turkey at Plastic Surgery Istanbul in 2026 is $5,800 USD all-inclusive — sitting inside a $4,200–$7,800 USD spread driven by which technique your face genuinely needs. The same average in the United States is roughly $28,500.

The average facelift cost in Turkey is $5,800 USD all-inclusive in 2026, based on Plastic Surgery Istanbul package data. Individual prices range from $4,200 (mini facelift) to $7,800 (deep plane facelift). The same procedure averages $28,500 in the United States — making the typical American patient saving roughly $22,700, or 79% of total cost.
The honest answer comes from real package data, not marketing math. Across our 2026 facelift bookings at Plastic Surgery Istanbul, the average facelift cost in Turkey lands at $5,800 USD — a number that includes surgery, anesthesia, JCI-aligned hospital stay, 9 nights in a 5-star recovery hotel, all VIP transfers, English-speaking host, medications, garment, and 24/7 concierge. Nothing missing. No surprise invoice arriving the week after surgery.
That $5,800 average sits inside a clean three-tier spread. Mini facelift averages $4,700 (early jowling, 40s patients). SMAS facelift averages $5,800 (the median outcome — jawline and lower-face rejuvenation for patients in their 50s). Deep plane facelift averages $7,100 (the most natural and longest-lasting result, common for patients in their 60s). Where you personally land depends on a single honest variable: which technique Prof. Dr. Cengiz Volkan Demirtaş recommends after reviewing your photos.
Compare that to the U.S. average. According to surgeon-fee data published by the American Society of Plastic Surgeons and aggregated U.S. clinic price reports, the average facelift cost in the United States in 2026 sits between $15,000 and $35,000 for the surgeon's fee alone — with a working median around $25,000. Add anesthesia ($1,500–$3,500), facility fees ($2,500–$5,000), labs, garments, prescriptions, and a recovery hotel, and the realistic U.S. *total* average climbs to roughly $28,500. The structural gap between $5,800 and $28,500 is what this entire page is here to explain — and to back with data.
We didn't pull the average facelift cost in Turkey off a competitor's page. The number is built from the actual all-inclusive packages booked through Plastic Surgery Istanbul during the 2025–2026 cycle, weighted by procedure mix. Each booking carries a single transparent USD invoice — no exclusions, no add-ons billed later — so the average reflects what U.S. patients genuinely paid, door to door for the medical portion.
The U.S. comparison number is built from publicly available data: the American Society of Plastic Surgeons (ASPS) annual surgeon-fee statistics, RealSelf cost reporting, and aggregated quote data shared by U.S. patients during their consultations with us. Where a U.S. number includes only a surgeon's fee, we add the line items that fee excludes — anesthesia, facility, garment, recovery — to keep the comparison apples-to-apples. The resulting U.S. *total* average of $28,500 is intentionally conservative; major-metro quotes routinely run higher.
What we deliberately do not do is compare our all-inclusive Istanbul package to a U.S. surgeon's fee in isolation. That kind of comparison flatters our number and disrespects yours. The whole point of an honest average facelift cost in Turkey report is to give you the same real-world dollar amount on both sides of the table.
The average facelift cost in Turkey only means something if you can see exactly what every dollar buys. Below is the line-by-line. Every item is already inside the package price — there is no separate facility fee, no anesthesia surprise, no consultation upcharge, no pharmacy run.
Every facelift is performed personally by Prof. Dr. Cengiz Volkan Demirtaş — 7,200+ facial procedures, former faculty at Marmara University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Plastic Surgery. There is no junior surgeon, no rotating roster. This single line is the largest reason our averages are stable and predictable.
General anesthesia, intra-operative monitoring, IV medications, and the dedicated time of a board-certified anesthesiologist throughout the case. In a U.S. average, this single line item adds $1,500–$3,500. With us, it's bundled into the average.
Operating room, sterile supplies, scrub team, ICU-level monitoring, nursing, meals, and your private suite for the first 24–48 hours after surgery. The 'facility fee' that swells the U.S. average does not appear on your invoice.
Nine nights in a quiet, climate-controlled 5-star property selected specifically for post-facelift recovery. Soft pillows, room service, late checkout, blackout curtains, discreet staff. Booked separately, this would add $1,800–$3,000 in Istanbul.
From the moment you exit Istanbul Airport (IST) until you fly home, every transfer between airport, hotel, hospital, and clinic is in a private premium vehicle with a vetted driver. No taxis. No rideshares. No fumbling with apps while bandaged.
A dedicated bilingual host attends every consultation, the surgery day, and your follow-ups. They translate, take notes, and stay reachable through the entire trip. On facial surgery — where nuance about asymmetry, tension, and jawline matters — this is the most underrated line in the average.
Your patient coordinator stays on WhatsApp around the clock for the entire stay — for medical questions, soft-food requests, ice packs, pharmacy runs, anything at all. The line American patients consistently rate the highest in their post-trip surveys.
All antibiotics, painkillers, anti-swelling medications, your custom facial compression garment, cold compresses, scar-care ointment, and a printed plain-English aftercare manual — handed to you before discharge. No pharmacy visits. No surprise pickups.
An average is most useful when you compare it to the average you'd actually pay at home. Below are realistic 2026 *total* facelift averages in major U.S. cities — surgery, anesthesia, facility, garments, recovery — versus our all-inclusive Istanbul average. The right column is the dollar saving for a typical patient flying from each city.
Read the right column. Even from the cheapest U.S. metros for facelift surgery, the average American patient saves between $16,000 and $30,000 by choosing Istanbul — and that is *after* adding a $650–$1,200 round-trip flight to the budget. The average facelift cost in Turkey advantage isn't a cosmetic discount. It's a structural reality of currency, overhead, and high surgical volume.
Age isn't a price factor by itself, but it strongly correlates with which technique a patient genuinely needs — and that does move the average. Here is what most patients in each age bracket end up paying, based on our 2026 data.
Average package: $4,700 USD (mini facelift). Typical concern is early jowling, mild loss of jawline definition, and the first hint of lower-face heaviness. A mini facelift addresses the lower face with shorter incisions and a faster recovery — and pulls the average down for this age group.
Average package: $5,800 USD (SMAS facelift). This is the demographic median — and the technique median. SMAS repositions the deeper structural layer of the face, producing the gold-standard jawline and lower-face result, which is why this age group sits exactly at the 2026 average.
Average package: $7,100 USD (deep plane facelift). More advanced laxity and volume loss usually call for a deep plane approach, which repositions the deeper facial unit as one piece. This is the highest-skill technique, and it pulls the average up for older patients — but produces the most natural and longest-lasting result.
Average combined package: $6,650 USD (face + neck lift, or face + upper blepharoplasty). Adding a related procedure in the same operating session shares anesthesia, hospital, and recovery — adding $700–$1,200 instead of doubling the bill. Roughly 40% of our facelift patients combine, which is why this average matters.
Average revision package: typically priced individually, often within or slightly above the deep plane band. Revision facelifts (correcting prior surgery elsewhere) require longer operating time and refined technique. We quote these honestly from photos and your prior op note rather than off a list.
The average facelift cost in Turkey is roughly 80% below the U.S. average for three structural reasons: a strong U.S. dollar against the Turkish lira, far lower clinic operating costs in Istanbul (rent, salaries, insurance), and government-backed support of medical tourism. None of these factors touch surgical quality, hospital standards, or surgeon training — they only affect the invoice.
A board-certified facial surgeon in Istanbul and a board-certified facial surgeon in Manhattan are paid for the same hour of operating time — but in different currencies. The U.S. dollar buys far more in Turkey than at home, which is also why the same iPhone, the same Marriott room, and the same surgical suture cost less in Istanbul. The average facelift cost in Turkey benefits from exactly the same exchange-rate math.
Clinic rent, nursing salaries, malpractice insurance, and even sterile-supply contracts cost a fraction of what they cost in New York or Los Angeles. We pass those operational savings directly into the package price. What we never cut is the equipment list, the safety protocol, the anesthesiologist, or the surgeon — those are non-negotiable, and they match top Western standards line for line.
Turkey treats health tourism as a strategic export industry. Government tax incentives and infrastructure support help certified clinics serving international patients reinvest into JCI-grade equipment and patient experience. That is one major reason Istanbul now ranks among the world's top destinations for facial surgery — and why the average stays low without sacrificing quality.
Prof. Dr. Demirtaş has performed 7,200+ facial procedures. That kind of volume produces something money cannot buy in a low-volume market: pattern recognition, refined technique, predictable outcomes, and operating-room efficiency. High volume also lets the clinic negotiate better pricing on supplies — savings that flow into the average facelift cost in Turkey, not into anyone's pocket.
The 2026 average is a useful anchor, but your personal quote will land slightly above or below it for honest, predictable reasons. None of these are sales upsells — they are real surgical decisions Prof. Dr. Demirtaş makes after reviewing your photos.
Mini ($4,200–$5,200) sits below the average. SMAS ($5,200–$6,400) lands on it. Deep plane ($6,400–$7,800) sits above it. The decision is anatomical, not financial — Prof. Dr. Demirtaş recommends the technique that genuinely fits the aging pattern in your photos.
Adding a neck lift typically adds $700–$1,200, upper blepharoplasty adds $600–$900, fat transfer adds $500–$900, and a brow lift adds $800–$1,400. Each shares anesthesia, hospital, and recovery — making the per-procedure cost roughly half what a separate trip would cost.
Significant skin laxity, advanced platysmal banding in the neck, deep nasolabial folds, or revision after prior facial surgery all increase operating time. Your quote is built honestly from your photos — we don't quote you below the average to win the booking and bill above it later.
The standard package includes a 9-night premium 5-star hotel selected for post-op patients. Some patients upgrade to a luxury suite, extend a few nights to enjoy Istanbul once cleared, or request bespoke arrangements. Your medical price stays the same; only the lifestyle portion adjusts.
Flight prices vary much more than our package price. Booking outside U.S. summer-peak weeks can save $200–$500 on airfare alone. Our coordinators will tell you the cheapest realistic dates while still keeping the right surgical date for you.
Quotes far below the $4,200 floor of the average facelift cost in Turkey almost always exclude anesthesia, hospital fees, garments, follow-ups, or even consultations. At Plastic Surgery Istanbul, the all-inclusive average price we quote is the final number — every medical and logistical line is bundled and disclosed before you ever book a flight.
There's a specific kind of dangerous quote in medical tourism: the one that sits dramatically below the genuine average. You see '$2,500 facelift Turkey' on an ad, you message the clinic, and the surprises start arriving — anesthesia is extra, the hospital charges separately, garments and meds are billed at discharge, follow-up visits cost money, and the 'transfer' is a shared shuttle. By the time you add it up, the cheap quote isn't even cheap. Worse, the corner-cutting often extends to things you can't see — surgeon experience, hospital accreditation, post-op support.
Our pricing model is the deliberate opposite. The all-inclusive average facelift cost in Turkey at our clinic — and the personalized quote you'll receive after a free photo consultation — is the final number. Every medical and logistical expense is bundled. You receive a single transparent invoice in U.S. dollars. There is no separate anesthesiologist bill, no facility fee, no upcharge for compression garments, no 'consultation tax', no surprise pharmacy visit. We invest in honesty because patients who feel respected become patients who refer their friends — and that is how we have grown.
We try to make the payment side as boring and predictable as possible. A small refundable deposit secures your surgery date and locks the package price in U.S. dollars (so currency moves don't surprise you). The remaining balance is due on arrival, before surgery. You receive a detailed invoice for every payment — useful if you're financing through a U.S. lender or claiming through any flexible spending arrangement.
Because facelift is elective, U.S. health insurance does not cover it — but several reputable U.S. medical loan companies do. They specialize in financing aesthetic surgery, including procedures performed abroad, and let you spread the cost over 24–60 months. We can provide every document those lenders ask for: itemized procedure list, surgeon credentials, hospital accreditation, expected recovery timeline. Many of our patients combine a small personal payment with financing to break the average facelift cost in Turkey into a comfortable monthly figure — often $150–$280/month over 36 months.
A small deposit secures your date. Pay the balance via international SWIFT transfer before arrival. Lowest-fee, lowest-friction option for most U.S. patients.
We've supported patients using CareCredit-style and dedicated cosmetic-surgery lenders. We provide all documentation; you apply at home before traveling.
Major credit cards accepted. Notify your bank about international travel ahead of time. Watch for foreign transaction fees (typically 1–3%).
Many patients pay 30–50% in cash and finance the remainder. Our coordinators will sketch out three to four scenarios so you pick the lowest total cost of capital.

Every facelift in our 2026 average was performed personally by Prof. Dr. Cengiz Volkan Demirtaş — there is no rotating roster, no junior surgeon hand-off, no marketing-vs-operating-room mismatch. With 7,200+ facial procedures performed and decades of academic experience as a former faculty member at Marmara University Faculty of Medicine, Department of Plastic Surgery, Prof. Dr. Demirtaş is one of Istanbul's most respected names in deep plane facelift, SMAS facelift, neck lift, blepharoplasty, and fat transfer rejuvenation. His operating philosophy is simple: refreshed, never pulled — natural, never overdone. That consistency is the single biggest reason our average is so stable across thousands of cases.
An average is more meaningful when you see what every dollar actually funds. Here is the 10-day trip your average package buys, refined across thousands of facial procedures so the medical and logistical pieces interlock cleanly.
Your private driver meets you inside the IST terminal and transfers you to the 5-star recovery hotel. Rest of the day to sleep off jet lag, hydrate, and unpack. Your coordinator confirms tomorrow's clinic time on WhatsApp.
Driver brings you to the clinic. Prof. Dr. Demirtaş does a detailed facial analysis — bone structure, skin quality, fat distribution, aging pattern — and finalizes your technique. Pre-op blood work, ECG, and a sit-down with the anesthesiologist round out the day.
Early morning transfer to the JCI-aligned partner hospital. Your translator is with you. Prof. Dr. Demirtaş performs your facelift — typically 3–5 hours under general anesthesia. You wake up in your private room, monitored continuously by nursing.
Morning visit from Prof. Dr. Demirtaş to check dressings and initial healing. Once cleared, your driver takes you back to the hotel. Aftercare kit, garment, and medications are handed to you in person with a plain-English walkthrough.
Swelling and bruising peak around day 3–4 and start coming down. You rest, eat soft food, walk the hallway, and stay in WhatsApp contact with your coordinator. One short clinic visit for drain or stitch checks as needed.
Final in-person review with Prof. Dr. Demirtaş. Remaining sutures removed, healing assessed, long-term aftercare reviewed. By now most patients can clearly see their new jawline and contour emerging.
Once Prof. Dr. Demirtaş clears you, your driver transfers you to IST. You fly home with a printed aftercare manual and a structured virtual follow-up schedule (1, 3, 6, and 12 months).
Yes — when you choose a board-certified surgeon operating in a JCI-aligned hospital. The lower average facelift cost in Turkey reflects currency and overhead, not safety standards. At Plastic Surgery Istanbul, every safety layer — surgeon credentials, anesthesia protocol, hospital accreditation, post-op monitoring — matches or exceeds top U.S. clinics.
This is the question that should follow every average-cost question, and the honest answer is: yes — but only when you buy from the right place. The risk in medical tourism is not Turkey; it's the lowest-bid clinic. A safe facelift requires three things: a board-certified surgeon with high facial-surgery volume, a properly accredited hospital with a real anesthesia program, and structured 24/7 post-op support. We deliver all three, and we let you verify each one before you commit.
Our hospital is JCI-aligned — the Joint Commission International standard, which is the same accreditation framework used by leading U.S. hospitals. That single fact tells you the operating room, sterilization processes, anesthesia program, and patient safety protocols are at the global gold standard. Prof. Dr. Demirtaş's credentials, his 7,200+ case volume, and the structured post-op support are easy to verify and easy to talk through with our coordinators on a video call before you book.
What you should actively avoid is a clinic that won't tell you who their surgeon is, won't tell you which hospital they operate in, won't show you a properly itemized invoice, or quotes a price that sounds too good to be real. Those are the clinics that create the bad headlines. The structural advantage that keeps our average facelift cost in Turkey below the U.S. average does not require — and at our clinic, does not get — any safety compromise.
Below are real American patients across the average spectrum — a mini, an SMAS at the median, a deep plane above the average, and a combined trip. Beyond the savings, the consistent thread is the same: natural-looking results, calm recovery, and a sense of being looked after.
"Mini facelift, just over $4,800 all-in. I'd been quoted $19,500 in Raleigh for the same thing. Recovery in the hotel was peaceful, the WhatsApp support was honestly the most reassuring part. Below the average, but I got exactly what my face needed."
"SMAS facelift right at the average — $5,800 to the dollar. My local quote was $28,000 for the surgeon's fee alone, before anesthesia. The Istanbul total *with* my flight was less than a third of that. The result is more natural than the U.S. before-after photos I'd seen."
"Deep plane at $7,300 — slightly above the average and worth every cent. As a man going for a facelift, I needed conservative work that didn't change who I look like. Prof. Dr. Demirtaş did exactly that. Total saving versus my Albuquerque quote was over $25,000."
"Combined facelift + upper blepharoplasty + neck lift — total $7,650. The same combo in Sacramento was quoted at $36,000. Honest invoice, honest recovery, and the result has held a year later. I'd recommend the same trip to anyone in my position."
You've now seen the real average facelift cost in Turkey for 2026, the technique-by-technique breakdown, and how it compares city by city to the U.S. The next step is the easy one — send us your photos and a short note, and within 24 hours you'll have a firm, all-inclusive quote in U.S. dollars, the technique Prof. Dr. Demirtaş personally recommends for your face, and a sample 10-day itinerary. No deposit required to receive the quote. No pressure to book. Just the information you need to make a calm, informed decision about your face — and your savings.