Direct neck lift
All cosmetic surgery involves risks and individual results vary. Cosmetic surgery is a serious decision. Decisions about whether to proceed should be made after careful consideration and following at least two consultations with a qualified medical practitioner.
The direct neck lift — also called direct cervicoplasty or direct submentoplasty — is a surgical procedure that addresses submental fullness, loose cervical skin, and platysmal laxity through incisions placed directly in the anterior neck. Unlike the traditional facelift or neck lift, which route incisions around the ears and behind the hairline, the direct neck lift works through incisions placed in the submental crease and, where necessary, extending down the anterior midline of the neck.
The procedure is particularly well suited to men — facial hair provides natural camouflage for the anterior neck scar during healing, and many male patients prefer the directness of the approach and the shorter operating time and recovery compared to a full rhytidectomy. For the right patient, a direct neck lift can achieve significant recontouring of the submental region and neck without the scope — or the recovery — of a full facelift.
All surgery carries risks — read the full facelift and neck lift risks page →
Who is a Good Candidate?
The direct neck lift is not the right procedure for everyone — patient selection is critical. The best results are seen in patients whose concerns are concentrated in the neck and submental region without significant jowling or midface descent, and who are prepared to accept a visible anterior neck scar in exchange for the advantages of the approach.
Primary Concern is the Neck
Submental fullness, loose cervical skin, or platysmal banding as the dominant concern — without significant jowling or facial laxity
Prepared to Accept the Scar
The anterior neck scar is the central trade-off of the direct approach. In men, facial hair provides effective camouflage during healing
Shorter Procedure Preferred
Patients who are time-constrained, risk-averse, or who prefer to avoid the longer recovery of a full facelift
Favourable Anatomy
Ptotic and loose cervical skin not extending below the thyroid cartilage, minimal jowling, good chin projection, and a higher hyoid position
Patients with more extensive laxity, significant jowling, or descending neck skin below the thyroid cartilage may achieve better and more comprehensive results with a full deep plane facelift and neck lift. The most appropriate approach is determined at consultation after a thorough assessment of your anatomy. Read more about neck lift surgery → | Deep plane facelift →
What the Procedure Addresses
Direct access through anterior neck incisions allows Dr Roth to address all the relevant anatomical layers of the submental region in a single procedure:
The Incision — Scar Placement and Design
The central characteristic — and the central trade-off — of the direct neck lift is the anterior neck scar. Unlike facelift incisions that are concealed around the ear and behind the hairline, the direct neck lift places incisions in the anterior cervical skin. This visibility is the reason careful patient selection and counselling are essential before proceeding.
Several incision designs have been described. The key principle in all of them is to break up any linear vertical scar component using geometric techniques (Z-plasty, W-plasty) that disrupt the straight line and allow the scar to settle within the natural shadow of the submentum. The most commonly used designs include:
The Grecian urn design — described by Farrior and colleagues and favoured by many experienced surgeons — combines a vertically oriented fusiform excision with horizontally oriented ellipses at the superior and inferior apices, producing a final incision pattern that resembles the silhouette of an ancient Grecian urn. A 60° Z-plasty is placed at the cervicomental angle to reduce tension, disrupt the linear scar, and further sharpen the cervicomental angle. The combination addresses excess skin in both the horizontal and vertical planes and produces a scar that settles within the natural submental creases.
Two horizontal incisions connected by a vertical midline limb — the configuration resembles an H on its side. Lateral skin flaps are undermined and advanced to the midline, with overlapping skin excised. The vertical limb may be closed with a Z-plasty. The Lazy-H removes excess skin in the horizontal plane but does not reduce the vertical length of the anterior neck scar.
A superior ellipse at the level of the submental crease combined with a vertical midline limb, with Z-plasties incorporated into the vertical portion. Flaps are undermined laterally, excess skin is excised, and the platysma is plicated to the level of the hyoid. An effective and widely used technique for moderate degrees of submental redundancy.
A vertically oriented W-plasty replaces the straight vertical midline limb, disrupting the linear scar into a series of short interlocking triangles. The W-plasty configuration hides within the shadow of the submentum and produces a much less apparent midline scar than a simple vertical excision. Horizontal incisions are placed at the submental and suprahyoid creases.
Preoperative markings are made with the patient in the upright position — the anatomy of the submental region changes significantly in the supine position and accurate planning requires the effect of gravity to be present.
Direct Neck Lift vs Full Neck Lift
| Direct Neck Lift | Full Neck Lift / Deep Plane Facelift | |
|---|---|---|
| Incision location | Anterior neck — visible but concealable with beard | Around the ear and behind the hairline — concealed |
| Jowls addressed | No | Yes |
| Midface addressed | No | Yes (deep plane) |
| Cervical skin excised | Yes — directly, under vision | Yes — via lateral tension vectors |
| Operating time | 1–2 hours (often under local anaesthesia) | 3–5 hours (general anaesthesia) |
| Recovery | Shorter — typically 1 week | 2–3 weeks minimum |
| Best suited to | Men with isolated submental/cervical concerns, willing to accept anterior scar | Patients with combined lower face and neck descent; those unwilling to accept anterior scar |
Recovery
The direct neck lift is typically performed as day surgery, often under local anaesthesia with or without intravenous sedation. The shorter operative time and more limited dissection translate to a faster recovery than a full facelift or neck lift.
Risks and Complications
The direct neck lift is a surgical procedure that carries real risks. These include haematoma (approximately 3% in neck lift surgery — risk is higher in men, patients with hypertension, and those on anticoagulants), infection, wound dehiscence, scarring including hypertrophic or visible scarring, asymmetry, changes in sensation, skin necrosis (particularly in smokers), and hair loss along the incision margins. The risk of hypertrophic or widened scarring is an important consideration specific to the anterior neck location of these incisions — scar revision and laser resurfacing are available if needed. All risks are discussed in detail at consultation.
Read the full facelift and neck lift risks page →
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about the direct neck lift answered by Dr Jason Roth, Specialist Otolaryngologist and Head and Neck Surgeon, Sydney.
Not necessarily — the direct neck lift can often be performed under local anaesthesia alone, or local anaesthesia combined with intravenous sedation, as day surgery. General anaesthesia may be used depending on patient preference, the complexity of the procedure, or if it is being combined with other procedures. The anaesthesia approach will be discussed and planned at consultation.
Yes — the anterior neck scar is the defining trade-off of the direct neck lift, and patients must be fully counselled about this before proceeding. The scar is visible in the early post-operative period. Over weeks to months, it fades and flattens, settling into the natural submental shadow. Scar design — using Z-plasty, W-plasty, or the Grecian urn configuration — is specifically intended to break up any linear component and help the scar settle within natural creases.
In men, a beard provides very effective camouflage during the healing phase and ongoing. For patients concerned about scar visibility who are not willing to wear a beard, a conventional neck lift or facelift with pre-auricular and post-auricular incisions may be more appropriate.
No. The direct neck lift is specifically designed to address the anterior neck and submental region. It does not address jowling along the jawline, midface descent, or nasolabial folds. Patients with significant jowling alongside their neck concerns are better served by a full lower facelift or deep plane facelift, which addresses the neck as part of a more comprehensive lifting procedure through pre-auricular incisions. The most appropriate approach is determined at consultation.
Yes — chin augmentation can be performed through the same submental incisions at the time of a direct neck lift. Chin projection has a significant influence on the apparent cervicomental angle — a well-projected chin creates a more defined cervicofacial contour and can substantially improve the appearance of the neck. Whether this is appropriate for your anatomy is assessed at consultation.
- Day 1: Compression dressing, rest at home.
- Days 2–7: Swelling and tightness. Avoid shaving over the incision.
- Days 7–10: Sutures removed. Most patients socially presentable by 10–14 days.
- Weeks 2–12: Scar maturation — silicone gel and sun protection essential.
- 3–6 months: Scar well settled within the submental shadow in most cases.
The direct neck lift is a cosmetic procedure and does not attract Medicare rebates. All associated costs — surgeon’s fee, anaesthetist’s fee (where applicable), and any facility fees — are the patient’s responsibility. A full itemised quote will be provided at consultation.
Patients who are not well suited include those with significant jowling or midface descent (better served by a full facelift), those with submental skin laxity extending well below the thyroid cartilage (where a full neck lift is more appropriate), patients with significant scarring risk factors, active smokers (substantially elevated risk of wound healing complications and skin necrosis — cessation for at least two weeks before and after surgery is required), and patients who are not willing to accept a visible anterior neck scar.
Neck Lift Surgery → | Deep Neck Lift → | Deep Plane Facelift → | Facelift & Neck Lift Risks → | Before & After Gallery →
Specialist Otolaryngologist & Head and Neck Surgeon
Specialist registration — Otorhinolaryngology, Head & Neck Surgery
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