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Can Botox Get Rid Of Wrinkles Under Eyes? | Real Limits

Botox can soften some under-eye wrinkles caused by muscle movement, but it won’t erase loose skin, hollows, or deep static lines.

Under-eye wrinkles are tricky because the area is thin, mobile, and close to the eye. Botox works by relaxing selected muscles, so it fits wrinkles that show up when you smile or squint. It does far less for lines that stay visible when your face is resting.

The best answer depends on the wrinkle type. A tiny amount may help a lower-eyelid “jelly roll,” the soft bunching that appears under the lashes when smiling. Crow’s feet at the outer corners often respond better. Crepey skin, tear trough shadows, and under-eye bags usually need a different plan.

Botox For Under-Eye Wrinkles: What It Can Change

Botox is a neuromodulator. It reduces the signal between nerve and muscle, so the treated muscle contracts less. When a wrinkle is made by repeated squeezing, that softer movement can make the line look smoother.

The under-eye area has little room for error. Too much relaxation can make the lower lid feel loose, change the smile, worsen puffiness, or make dry eyes feel worse. That’s why under-eye Botox is usually done with tiny dosing, careful placement, and a conservative touch.

Wrinkles Botox Handles Best

Botox tends to work best for dynamic lines. These are wrinkles that appear during expression, then fade when the face relaxes. In the eye area, that means crow’s feet, squint lines, and mild lower-lid bunching during a smile.

It is less helpful when the skin itself has thinned or stretched. If the line stays carved in at rest, muscle relaxation alone won’t rebuild collagen, fill hollows, or tighten skin. It may still soften the motion that keeps creasing the same spot.

  • Better fit: smile lines, squint lines, outer-corner creases, mild jelly roll.
  • Poorer fit: loose lower-lid skin, tear trough shadows, fluid bags, etched resting lines.
  • Riskier fit: dry eye history, lower-lid laxity, heavy bags, prior eyelid surgery.

Why Under-Eye Lines Don’t All Respond The Same

Several changes can sit in the same small area. One person may have fine movement lines from smiling. Another may have a hollow groove that casts a shadow. A third may have crepey texture from sun exposure and skin thinning.

Botox only acts on muscle pull. It doesn’t add volume, remove extra skin, or change pigment. That’s the reason two people can get the same dose near the eyes and see different results.

The BOTOX Cosmetic label lists temporary improvement of moderate to severe lateral canthal lines, better known as crow’s feet, as an approved cosmetic use in adults. Lower-eyelid injection for under-eye bunching is more selective and may be off-label, depending on the exact placement and goal.

Static Lines Versus Movement Lines

A simple mirror test helps set expectations. Smile hard, then relax your face. If the under-eye crease nearly disappears, Botox may have a visible softening effect. If the crease remains, texture or skin laxity is doing much of the work.

This does not mean Botox is useless for etched lines. Less muscle pull may slow repeated folding in that area. Still, the visible change is usually modest unless the wrinkle is driven mainly by expression.

What Results Usually Look Like

Results are gradual. Many people start seeing a change within several days, with the final effect settling near two weeks. The American Academy of Dermatology says many patients see botulinum toxin results in 3 to 7 days, and improvements often last 3 to 4 months.

For under-eye use, the best result is usually a softer crease, not a blank lower lid. A natural smile still needs some movement. When the goal is “no lines at all,” the risk of odd expression and lower-lid trouble goes up.

Under-Eye Concern How Botox May Help Better Match If Botox Falls Short
Crow’s feet at outer corners Often softens lines from squinting and smiling Laser, skin care, or filler if etched
Lower-lid jelly roll May reduce smile-related muscle bunching Lower dose or no treatment if dry eye risk is high
Fine crepey texture Small change if movement adds to creasing Retinoid, resurfacing, microneedling, sunscreen
Tear trough hollow Won’t fill the hollow or shadow Filler, fat grafting, or skin treatment
Under-eye bags Usually won’t help and may make puffiness stand out Eyelid surgery review or allergy/fluid care
Deep resting wrinkles May soften movement that worsens the crease Resurfacing, collagen-building treatment, skin care
Dark circles from pigment Won’t lighten pigment Brightening skin care, lasers, sun protection
Loose lower-lid skin May create too much laxity in poor candidates Skin tightening or lower blepharoplasty review

Safety Checks Before Treating This Area

Eye-area Botox should be done by a licensed medical injector who treats this region often. Placement matters because the same muscle helps both expression and eyelid position. A few millimeters can change the result.

The American Academy of Dermatology overview notes that botulinum toxin therapy is used for aging-related lines and that results are temporary. A temporary result is helpful if the outcome is too weak, too strong, or not the right match.

Questions To Ask Before Booking

Ask the injector what they see when your face moves and when it rests. You want a clear reason for choosing Botox instead of filler, resurfacing, or no injection at all.

  • Are my under-eye lines dynamic, static, or mixed?
  • Will you treat the lower lid, crow’s feet, or both?
  • How many units do you plan to use per side?
  • What side effects should I watch for near the eye?
  • What should I do if I get drooping, double vision, or dry eye?

The answer should feel specific to your face. A rushed promise that Botox will “erase” under-eye wrinkles is a red flag. Good eye-area work is measured, not aggressive.

Risks Around The Eyes

Most side effects are mild, such as tenderness, small bruises, swelling, or a tight feeling. The eye area also carries risks that feel more disruptive, including dry eye, uneven smile, lower-lid weakness, eyelid droop, blurred vision, or double vision.

The label also carries a boxed warning about toxin effects spreading beyond the injection area. The risk is rare in cosmetic dosing, but warning signs such as trouble swallowing, speaking, or breathing need urgent care.

Possible Issue What It Can Feel Like Smart Next Step
Bruising Small purple or red marks near injection points Ask about blood thinners and aftercare before treatment
Dry eye Burning, gritty feeling, extra tearing Tell the injector before treatment if you already have it
Lid droop Upper lid feels heavy or sits lower Call the treating clinic for next steps
Lower-lid laxity Lower lid feels loose or smile looks changed Use lower dosing next time or skip this area
Vision changes Blurred or double vision Seek medical care promptly

When Botox Is The Wrong Choice

Botox is usually the wrong tool when the main issue is a hollow tear trough. A shadow under the eye can mimic a wrinkle, but relaxing muscle won’t lift that groove. Filler may help some hollows, yet poor filler placement can cause puffiness or a blue-gray cast.

It is also a poor match when under-eye bags are the main concern. If a bag is made of fat, fluid, or loose skin, Botox can make the area look less firm. Treating crow’s feet alone may still soften the outer eye while leaving the bag alone.

The FDA has also warned against unapproved and misbranded botulinum toxin products sold online. The FDA warning on illegal Botox marketing states that these products may be counterfeit, contaminated, improperly stored, ineffective, or unsafe.

How To Get A Better Result

Start with a conservative dose. Under-eye Botox is easier to add than to undo. If the first session gives mild softening without eye irritation or smile changes, the injector can fine-tune later.

Photos help. Take front-facing pictures with the face relaxed, smiling, and squinting. Use the same light each time. This makes it easier to judge whether the treatment softened the line or only changed the way light hits the skin.

Care Habits That Pair Well With Botox

Daily sunscreen helps protect thin under-eye skin from more texture change. A gentle retinoid may help fine lines over time, as long as the skin tolerates it. Moisturizer can make crepey lines look softer by improving surface hydration.

Sleep, allergies, salt, and alcohol can affect under-eye puffiness. Botox won’t fix those triggers. If swelling changes day to day, track patterns before paying for an injectable fix.

The Honest Answer

Botox can get rid of some under-eye wrinkles for some people, but “get rid of” is too strong for most cases. It can soften movement lines. It can reduce bunching from a smile. It can make crow’s feet look calmer.

It won’t repair loose skin, fill hollows, remove bags, or smooth every etched crease. The safest plan is to match the treatment to the cause: Botox for muscle movement, filler for selected hollows, resurfacing for texture, and surgery for true lower-lid bags or extra skin.

If your lines show mostly when you smile, Botox may be worth asking about. If the wrinkles are visible all day at rest, expect a mixed plan rather than one injection doing all the work.

References & Sources

Mo Maruf
Founder & Lead Editor

Mo Maruf

I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.

Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.

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