Bar Beauty Medical

Under-Eye Wrinkles in Toronto: How We Actually Fix Them

Toronto medical aesthetics clinic at 46 Fort York Blvd.

Last updated: May 25, 2026

Under-Eye Wrinkles in Toronto: How We Actually Fix Them

By Basil Russo, Founder — Bar Beauty Medical, 46 Fort York Blvd, CityPlace Toronto Medically reviewed by Dr. John David Henneberry-Fudge MD FRCPC (CPSO #95972), Medical Director Phone 416-923-1200 · Book at barbeautymedical.janeapp.com · 5.0 stars across 221 Google reviews


If the fine lines under your eyes don’t disappear when you stop smiling, you’re not imagining it. The skin there is 0.5 mm thick — about a quarter of your cheek. It sits on a muscle that fires every time you blink, on a fat pad that’s shrinking, on a bone that’s quietly resorbing. There’s nowhere for that anatomy to hide.

I’m Basil. I run Bar Beauty Medical on Fort York Blvd in CityPlace. This page is the conversation I’d have with you across our consult desk. Real prices. Real limits.

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What Causes Under-Eye Wrinkles?

Four problems stack at the same address. Skin thins (collagen drops about 1% a year after 25). The orbicularis muscle etches folds with every blink. The malar fat pad slides south in your mid-thirties. The orbital bone resorbs from your late-thirties. Treating skin alone can’t fix this. The muscle, fat, and bone are upstream.

When Do Under-Eye Wrinkles Start Showing Up?

For most people, between 28 and 34. They deepen sharply at two moments — perimenopause (oestrogen drops, collagen with it) and rapid weight loss. The GLP-1 wave has been brutal here. Ozempic deflates the malar fat pad and exposes lines that were hidden by volume.

What Makes Under-Eye Wrinkles Worse?

The three accelerants I see most:

  • UV exposure. Daily, winter included. Sunglasses plus mineral SPF 50 are non-negotiable.
  • Side or stomach sleeping. Creases the lid skin every night. Silk pillowcase helps.
  • Screen squinting. Recruits the lateral orbicularis and speeds up crow’s feet.

Smoking, dehydration, and chronic eye-rubbing pile on top.

What’s The Best Non-Surgical Treatment For Under-Eye Wrinkles?

Honestly, there isn’t one. The right answer is a small stack of two or three treatments matched to your dominant cause. Here are the five that work, least to most invasive.

Aerolase NeoSkin — Skin Quality, No Downtime

Aerolase NeoElite at 1064 nm with a 650-microsecond pulse heats the dermis to trigger collagen without ablating the surface. Safe on Fitzpatrick I-VI, including the darker skin tones older lasers would burn.

  • Cost: Aerolase NeoSkin Custom Facial $280; eye area on consult.
  • Sessions: 4-6 monthly, then quarterly.
  • Downtime: none. Mild pinkness 30-60 minutes.
  • Timeline: texture change by session 3, peak 12 weeks after the final session.

Microneedling With Exosomes Or PRP

SkinPen microneedling at 0.5-0.75 mm in the periorbital area, layered with ASCE+ exosomes or autologous PRP (our Vampire Facial). Growth factors delivered at the moment of repair.

  • Cost: SkinPen $400 · Microneedling + Exosomes $650 · Vampire Facial on consult · Under-Eye PRF on consult.
  • Sessions: 3-4 monthly, then twice yearly.
  • Downtime: 24-48 hours pinkness. Makeup by day 3.
  • Timeline: visible at week 4, peak 12 weeks post-course.

Meet The Team →

Tear-Trough Filler — Structural Restore

If the wrinkle sits over a hollow, restoring volume with a soft, low-G-prime HA filler can erase the wrinkle by re-tenting the skin. Look — this is high-risk anatomy. Master Injector Shahram Mafazi uses a blunt-tip cannula in the supra-periosteal plane. We never put thick fillers like Voluma here.

  • Cost: Tear Trough Filler $750.
  • Sessions: one syringe, reassess at 4 weeks. Maintenance 12-18 months.
  • Downtime: 24-72 hours swelling. Bruising possible.
  • Timeline: immediate; final settle at 4 weeks.

Botox For Crow’s Feet And Lower Orbicularis

Botox / Dysport / Xeomin / Nuceiva relaxes the muscle folding the skin every blink. 8-15 units per side along the lateral orbicularis for crow’s feet. 1-3 units in the pre-tarsal orbicularis for the “open eye” effect — technique-sensitive, since over-treatment causes lower-lid roll.

  • Cost: $140-$240 per session depending on units.
  • Sessions: every 3-4 months.
  • Downtime: none.
  • Timeline: onset day 3-7, peak day 14, lasts 12-16 weeks.

Morpheus 8 — Deep Remodel, Used Sparingly

Morpheus 8 is fractional RF microneedling for the upper malar and lateral periorbital zone. Not the immediate sub-orbital area — too close to the globe.

  • Cost: Face $900 · Half Face $600 · Face + Neck $1,400.
  • Sessions: 3 sessions, 4-6 weeks apart, then annual.
  • Downtime: 5-7 days grid marking and redness.
  • Timeline: tightening at week 6, peak 12 weeks.

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What Treatments Do You Not Offer Here?

Honest disclosure.

  • Lower blepharoplasty is the gold standard for advanced bagging with excess skin. It’s surgical. If you’re a surgical candidate, we refer to Toronto facial plastic surgeons (Dr. Cory Torgerson, Dr. Asif Pirani) rather than oversell a non-surgical workaround.
  • Fractional CO2 delivers dramatic results on deep static lines but needs 10-14 days of downtime and carries real hyperpigmentation risk on Fitzpatrick IV-VI. We don’t operate it.
  • Ultherapy produces modest lower-face tightening. For the same money we’d rather use Aerolase or Morpheus 8.

What Combination Protocol Do You Recommend?

The most common stack for a 38-45 year old with moderate under-eye wrinkles:

  1. Foundation: Tear-trough filler if volume loss dominates (~$750).
  2. Movement: Botox crow’s feet every 3-4 months ($140-240).
  3. Skin: Aerolase or Microneedling + Exosomes alternating monthly for 4 months ($280-650), then quarterly.
  4. At-home: Tretinoin 0.025% nightly (Dr. Henneberry-Fudge prescribes), mineral SPF 50, silk pillowcase.

Year-one investment: $3,200-$4,500. Meaningful change by month 3. Peak at month 6.

How Long Until I See Results?

  • Yes: 60-80% reduction in dynamic crow’s feet depth within 3 months. 40-60% reduction in fine lines and crepiness within 6 months. Concealer that stops settling into texture by month 3.
  • No: Skin that looks like it did at 25. Permanent results without maintenance. Resolution of pigment-based dark circles — different protocol, see melasma. Removal of significant dermatochalasis — that’s surgery.

When Is Under-Eye Treatment A Bad Idea?

Skip it if you’re pregnant or breastfeeding, if you have active BDD that won’t be resolved by changing your face, if you expect to look 20 years younger, if you’ve had recent eye surgery (wait 6 months post-bleph or LASIK), if you have active conjunctivitis or HSV, if you’re on anticoagulants without prescriber sign-off, or if your wedding is in 6 days. Book 6 weeks out.

A Note From Dr. Henneberry-Fudge

The under-eye area is the part of the face I screen most carefully for psychological readiness. A surprising number of “fix my under-eyes” requests are responding to a depressive episode, a breakup, or — in a small subset — body dysmorphic disorder. My job as Medical Director isn’t to gatekeep treatment from patients who’d benefit. It’s to identify the small subset for whom treatment won’t solve the underlying distress.

Dr. John David Henneberry-Fudge MD FRCPC, CPSO #95972

How Much Does Under-Eye Treatment Cost In Toronto?

Treatment Price Sessions
Tear Trough Filler (1 syringe) $750 1, then 12-18 mo
Botox crow’s feet (~12 units) $140-240 every 3-4 mo
Aerolase NeoSkin Custom Facial $280 4-6 monthly
SkinPen Microneedling $400 3-4 monthly
Microneedling + ASCE+ Exosomes $650 3 monthly
Vampire Facial / Under-Eye PRF Consult 3 monthly
Morpheus 8 — Half Face $600 3 sessions
Morpheus 8 — Face $900 3 sessions
Dissolving Filler $150 as needed
Consultation Free with deposit

Full live pricing: barbeauty.ca/price-list.

View Full Price List →

Who Will Actually Treat Me?

Master Injector Shahram Mafazi (10,000+ cases) handles tear-trough filler and Botox. Julia Barabas, our Glow Specialist, leads Aerolase, microneedling and PRF. Medical oversight from Dr. John David Henneberry-Fudge MD FRCPC.

Who Are Your Typical Patients?

  • 34-year-old tech worker, King West condo — Aerolase + low-dose Botox + tretinoin. Year-one ~$2,000.
  • 42-year-old perimenopausal, Liberty Village — tear-trough filler + Botox + Microneedling + Exosomes. Year-one ~$3,500.
  • 56-year-old, Yorkville referral — filler + Morpheus 8 lateral + Botox + Aerolase. Year-one ~$5,000.

What Do Real Patient Outcomes Look Like?

These are anonymised composites — patterns we see repeatedly, not specific individuals. Names are made up.

“Anna,” 34, marketing director from Liberty Village. Came in for her wedding ten months out. Concerned about photo-readiness — the camera-flash version of her face was not what her phone showed her in daylight. We ran a written plan: a baseline toxin appointment at the consult, one syringe of conservative cheek filler at month two, an Aerolase series of four sessions for low-grade redness, and a skincare routine built around tretinoin and mineral SPF. She came in for a final pre-wedding tune-up at month nine. Total spend across the year: $2,950. Her bridesmaids asked what gym she joined.

“Marcus,” 41, finance, lives in Yorkville, works downtown. Recovering from a bad experience at a chain spa where he’d been over-treated and looked frozen in client meetings for months. We dissolved the over-injected filler at the first appointment, let his face settle for six weeks, and then started over with a restrained plan: light toxin twice a year, no filler for the first nine months, Morpheus 8 series for skin quality once we’d seen a clean baseline. He’s been a regular for two and a half years. His result is what he’d describe as “nothing visible, just the version of me from five years ago.” Total annual spend: $2,400.

“Priya,” 29, software engineer in North York, Fitzpatrick V skin. Came for post-acne pigment that had haunted her since university. Active acne was already controlled by her dermatologist. We ran a focused Aerolase NeoSkin protocol of six sessions, paired with topical hydroquinone and tranexamic acid under Dr. Henneberry-Fudge’s prescription, plus aggressive daily mineral SPF. Pigment cleared 80-85% by month four. She added two microneedling-with-exosomes sessions for residual texture. Total: $2,200, mostly weighted into the first six months.

“Janet,” 56, retired teacher from Davisville. Significant midface volume loss after a decade of weight cycling. Wanted to look like herself, not like a different person. We ran a staged Sculptra program over six months, three vials total, with a single syringe of HA filler for the chin to balance proportions, and conservative toxin for the forehead. Year-one spend was higher, around $4,800. By month nine her old photographs and her current face were back in dialogue with each other. She refers her friends from her book club every quarter.

Common Misconceptions, Cleared Up

  • “More is better.” No. More units, more syringes, more sessions — the over-treated face is the most-recognised face. Restraint is the technique most clinics in Toronto don’t teach.
  • “If it’s cheap, it’s bad. If it’s expensive, it’s good.” Wrong both ways. Price tracks rent, marketing spend, and brand position more than it tracks clinical skill. We’ve reversed seven-figure work that came out of Yorkville addresses.
  • “I have to commit to a long-term plan today.” No. The first appointment is a single decision. Maintenance schedules are mapped at the second consult, after we see how your face responds.
  • “My results will look obvious.” Not if we do it right. The compliment patients hear most often is “you look rested” — not “what did you have done.”
  • “I should get the brand my friend got.” Maybe. Maybe not. Anatomy and skin physiology vary. Product choice is your injector’s decision at consult, not a brand-loyalty exercise.
  • “Injectables are a slippery slope.” Only if no one is screening for that. Dr. Henneberry-Fudge’s BDD protocol is built specifically to identify the patient pattern where treatment will not help — and we say no.

What Should I Ask at My Consult?

The free consult is twenty minutes. Most patients waste fifteen of those minutes on questions Google could have answered, and then run out of time before getting to the ones that actually predict their outcome. Here’s the list we wish every patient brought in.

About the person treating you

  • “How many of this exact treatment have you personally done in the last twelve months?” Volume tracks skill more reliably than years in practice.
  • “Who supervises your work, and can I verify their CPSO number?” Dr. Henneberry-Fudge is CPSO #95972 — verifiable on the public register in 30 seconds.
  • “Are you the person who will treat me on the day, or will I be handed off?” At Bar Beauty, the injector you consult with is the injector who treats you.

About the product or device

  • “What exact product are you using on me, and why that one over the alternatives?” If the answer is “this is what we stock,” that’s a margin answer, not a clinical one.
  • “Can I see the box and the lot number before you draw it up?” Any clinic should say yes without hesitation. We do this by default on every appointment.
  • “What’s the manufacturer training certification for this device or product?” Real certifications are checkable.

About what happens if things go wrong

  • “What’s your protocol for a vascular event with filler?” The answer should include hyaluronidase on the counter, not in a drawer down the hall.
  • “Who do I call at 11pm if something feels off?” We have a 24/7 patient line — many clinics do not.
  • “What’s your touch-up policy?” Ours is free at the 2-week mark for toxin, included in your initial fee.

About the result you want

  • “Is the result I’m describing anatomically realistic for my face?” Patients who don’t ask this end up disappointed.
  • “What’s the maintenance schedule and total annual cost if I commit?” The single-session price is the start of the conversation, not the end.
  • “What would you say no to today?” An injector who can’t name something they’d refuse is an injector you should leave.

Bring this list. Read it off your phone if you have to. The patients with the best long-term outcomes are the patients who acted like consumers, not patients.

How Do I Spot a Bad Provider for This in Toronto?

Toronto’s aesthetic market is unregulated at the storefront level. Anyone with a business licence and a Square reader can call themselves a medical spa. Here’s the field guide we’d hand a friend.

Red flags before you book

  • No medical director name on the website, or “Dr. on call” with no published name and no CPSO number to verify.
  • Pricing not published. If you have to ask for a quote, the price is whatever they think you’ll pay when you walk in.
  • A single phone number with no online booking. Operationally smaller than they want you to think.
  • Stock photo team page. Real teams photograph their real people.
  • A Google profile under 30 reviews after more than two years in business. Either nobody knows about them, or they’re suppressing the bad ones.

Red flags during the consult

  • They quote you for treatments you didn’t ask about, in the first ten minutes.
  • They don’t take a real medical history or screen for BDD.
  • The injector can’t name what brand of product they’re about to use, or what the alternatives are.
  • They suggest paying in cash for a discount. Indicates off-the-books bookkeeping and almost certainly no real chart on you.
  • They press you to commit today with a “package discount” that disappears if you walk out. Real clinics’ prices are stable.

Red flags during treatment

  • Product drawn from a vial you never saw or that has no label on it. Counterfeit filler is a real problem in Ontario.
  • No emergency kit visible — no hyaluronidase, no epinephrine, no AED.
  • They inject without marking your face first.
  • They rush. A real injection appointment is 15-30 minutes including conversation, not five.

Red flags after treatment

  • No written aftercare. No follow-up text. No 2-week check.
  • When you call with a concern, you get a voicemail box that doesn’t get returned for days.
  • You ask for your chart and they can’t produce it, or it’s a handwritten sheet in a binder.

The market has matured but the regulatory ceiling hasn’t moved. The patient who screens hard at the booking stage avoids almost every bad outcome we’ve seen.

Common Questions

Will it hurt? Aerolase = warm rubber-band snap. Microneedling with numbing = firm scratching. Tear-trough filler with cannula 3-4/10. Botox 1-2/10.

What if I don’t like the filler? HA filler is reversible. We dissolve it with hyaluronidase in a 15-minute appointment ($150). Back to baseline within 24 hours.

Can I do this before a wedding? Filler 6 weeks out. Botox 3 weeks out. Aerolase 4 weeks out. Never inside 10 days of the event.

Will my eyes look “done”? Not with our injection style. Conservative, staged, reassessed at 4 weeks.

Is this safe on Fitzpatrick V or VI? Aerolase is the safest laser for darker skin tones in current clinical use. Microneedling is safe across all phototypes. Filler is technique-dependent, not phototype-restricted.

Can men get under-eye treatment? Yes. About a third of our under-eye book is men. Same protocol, slightly different dosing.

How do I book? Online at barbeautymedical.janeapp.com, by phone at 416-923-1200, or walk in to 46 Fort York Blvd.

Is this treatment safe for darker skin tones? For most of what we offer, yes — Aerolase NeoElite at 1064 nm is safe across all Fitzpatrick types and is our default for vascular and pigment work in darker skin. Morpheus 8 carries a small PIH risk in Fitzpatrick V-VI that we mitigate with conservative energy settings.

Can I treat this while breastfeeding? Generally no for injectables. Most patients return to treatment three to six months after weaning. Lasers and most facials are fine while nursing.

How does this compare to Yorkville pricing at twice the price? Product is usually the same. Training is comparable. The differential is rent, location, and brand premium — not clinical skill.

Can I do this if I’m on Ozempic or another GLP-1? Yes, but planning matters. Significant weight loss redistributes facial fat. We stage filler decisions for patients in active weight loss.

Do you take insurance or HSA? Aesthetic treatments are not insured under OHIP. Some HSAs cover specific services. We provide itemised receipts on request.

Will my friends or co-workers notice? Not if we do it right. The compliment most patients hear is “you look rested,” not “you look different.”


Book Your Consult Online → Call 416-923-1200 Meet Our Medical Director →

Bar Beauty Medical · 46 Fort York Blvd, Toronto, ON M5V 3Z9 · 416-923-1200 · 5.0 stars · 221 Google reviews


IMAGES TO COMMISSION/SOURCE (30 images)

  1. Anatomy diagram: under-eye skin cross-section — label 0.5mm dermis vs 2mm cheek
  2. Anatomy diagram: orbicularis oculi with lateral and pre-tarsal fibres labelled
  3. Anatomy diagram: malar fat pad descent age 25 vs 45 overlay
  4. Anatomy diagram: orbital bone resorption inferior rim
  5. Before/after photo: Aerolase under-eye crepiness, week 0 vs week 12 (with consent)
  6. Before/after photo: tear-trough filler, 1 syringe, 4 weeks post
  7. Before/after photo: Botox crow’s feet at smile
  8. Before/after photo: Microneedling + Exosomes, 3 sessions
  9. Before/after photo: Morpheus 8 lateral periorbital
  10. Before/after photo: combination protocol (filler + Botox + Aerolase), 6 months
  11. Before/after photo: under-eye PRF, 3 sessions, with consent
  12. Before/after photo: male patient (35-45), Aerolase + Botox, 12 weeks
  13. Treatment-in-progress: cannula tear-trough injection, side angle, gloved hands only
  14. Treatment-in-progress: Botox crow’s feet injection
  15. Treatment-in-progress: Aerolase NeoSkin handpiece over under-eye area
  16. Treatment-in-progress: SkinPen microneedling at periorbital area
  17. Treatment-in-progress: PRF tube post-centrifuge
  18. Clinic interior: treatment room with reclining chair, soft lighting
  19. Clinic interior: reception and waiting area at 46 Fort York Blvd
  20. Clinic exterior: Fort York Blvd storefront with signage
  21. Device photo: Aerolase NeoElite handpiece close-up
  22. Device photo: Morpheus 8 RF tip detail
  23. Product photo: ASCE+ exosome vial
  24. Product photo: Restylane Eyelight syringe
  25. Product photo: tretinoin tube + mineral SPF 50 flatlay
  26. Team headshot: Shahram Mafazi, Master Injector
  27. Team headshot: Julia Barabas, Glow Specialist
  28. Team headshot: Dr. John David Henneberry-Fudge MD FRCPC, Medical Director
  29. Infographic: year-one combination protocol timeline (week 0 → month 12)
  30. Infographic: cost ladder $280-$5,000 with treatments mapped

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