- How Much Does Karisma Cost? Why an Exact Number Can't Be Given
- What Goes Into Karisma's Price
- Why You Should Look at the "Full-Course" Price
- Is Karisma Worth It Compared to Other Options
- Beware of "Abnormally Cheap Prices"
- What a Reasonable Price Should Include
- Verify It's Genuine Before You Pay
- Karisma Pricing in Phitsanulok — de Pry Clinic
- Frequently Asked Questions
- References
There is no fixed price for Karisma, because it depends on the amount used, the number of sessions in the course, genuine FDA-approved product, and the doctor who assesses you. What I want you to remember is — look at the "full-course" price, not a single session; don't be fooled by abnormally cheap prices; and judge the value by "whether your problem matches what Karisma does well." Karisma excels at restoring skin quality and giving a natural, dewy hydration, not at adding obvious volume. In this article, Dr. Time will walk you through each factor so you can pay with understanding.
How Much Does Karisma Cost? Why an Exact Number Can't Be Given
The first thing patients message to ask is, "Doctor, how much is Karisma?" I completely understand wanting to know the number first, but let me answer honestly and sincerely: giving an exact price without seeing your actual skin is difficult, and if anyone quotes a price on the spot without asking anything at all, I'd actually want you to be cautious.
Karisma is a treatment where the amount and number of sessions depend on each person's skin condition. Someone whose skin is just slightly tired and someone who wants to restore their whole face will naturally not use the same amount. If you'd like to first understand what Karisma is and how it works, try reading the "What Is Karisma" article alongside this, and then come back to the pricing — it'll be easier to understand.
What Goes Into Karisma's Price
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The wider the area that needs care or the more tired the skin, the more product is actually used. This is the major factor that makes the price differ from one person to another.
2. The Number of Sessions in the Course
Karisma focuses on restoring skin quality that gradually improves, so it's usually done as a course for consistent results. The price should be viewed as a whole course. Some places show a per-session price that looks cheap, but once you add up the whole course it may not be as cheap as you thought.
3. Genuine Product and Verifiability
Product that is FDA-approved and verifiable has a clear cost. An abnormally low price often reflects that something has been cut out — and that usually affects safety.
4. The Doctor Who Assesses and Injects Personally
Having a doctor assess you, choose the amount and placement, then provide ongoing care is what affects both safety and results. A price that includes this kind of care should not be compared directly with one that's "just inject and done."
When you call to ask about prices, I recommend asking these 3 things everywhere so you compare on the same basis — (1) Is this price per session or for the whole course? (2) How much product is used, and which genuine brand/model is it? (3) Who does the assessment and the injection? If any place can't answer all three clearly, you can't yet judge whether a cheap-looking price is truly worth it.
Why You Should Look at the "Full-Course" Price
This is where patients slip up most often. Many people see a "per-session" price that looks lovely and rush to decide, but forget that Karisma focuses on restoring skin quality, which relies on continuity. Budgeting for the whole course from the start helps you actually plan your finances without surprises later. I always recommend asking clearly, "Is this price per session or for the whole course, and how many sessions does the whole course include?"
Is Karisma Worth It Compared to Other Options
The word "worth it" depends on whether your problem matches what Karisma does well. Karisma is a bio-regenerative filler that uses Rh-Collagen (recombinant collagen) together with HA, so it excels at restoring skin quality, hydration, and smoothness rather than adding obvious volume. There is research studying the use of recombinant Type III collagen for facial skin rejuvenation that found good results. Here's how I compare it from a value standpoint.
| Perspective | Karisma (Rh-Collagen+HA) | HA Filler | Collagen Stimulator (PLLA/PCL) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Main goal | Restore skin quality, hydration, smoothness | Add volume to specific spots | Increase firmness across the face |
| How long it lasts | ~6–12 months (some up to 18) | ~6 months–1 year | ~1–4 years |
| Worth it if you | Have tired, dehydrated skin and shallow lines | Have clear hollow spots | Want firmness for several years |
Don't just compare "today's price." Try asking yourself, "What is my main problem?" If it's tired, dehydrated skin with shallow lines, then Karisma fits the bill and is worth it. But if it's a hollow spot where you want obvious volume, paying for Karisma may not hit the target as well as filler would. Value always starts with "matching the problem" first.
Beware of "Abnormally Cheap Prices"
I understand everyone wants something good at a light price, but when it comes to something injected into your face, I want you to be especially careful. If you come across Karisma at a shockingly cheap price, please pause and think, "Why can it be this cheap?"
For example: counterfeit or non-FDA-approved product, less than the stated amount, near-expiry product, or an injector who isn't a doctor capable of assessing you. These aren't just "getting less" — they carry the risk of inflammation or side effects. Saving at first may mean paying far more, several times over, to fix it later.
I'm not saying "most expensive = best." But I want you to choose a "reasonable" price — one that reflects genuine product, doctor assessment, and ongoing care — rather than only chasing the lowest number.
What a Reasonable Price Should Include
A Reasonable Price Should Include
- An assessment of your actual skin condition by a doctor before treatment
- Genuine FDA-approved product whose box/registration number you can ask to see
- Amount and placement chosen to suit you
- Follow-up care and post-treatment advice
Suspiciously Cheap Prices Often Cut These Out
- No assessment — "everyone gets the same injection"
- Won't let you see the box/registration number
- Unclear amount, or less injected than there should be
- Can't be reached after it's done, no continued care
Verify It's Genuine Before You Pay
- Ask to see the box and registration number — before it's opened for use, a good clinic shows you in person
- Check with the FDA yourself — go to oryor.com to verify products registered in Thailand
- Confirm the injector is a doctor — because this is directly a matter of safety
- Ask clearly what the price includes — per session or whole course, does it include follow-up, are there hidden costs?
- There's no fixed price — look at the whole course, and let a doctor assess the appropriate amount
- It's worth it when it "matches the problem" (tired, dehydrated skin, shallow lines), not just when it's cheapest
- Abnormally cheap prices risk non-genuine product / a non-doctor injector — avoid them
Karisma Pricing in Phitsanulok — de Pry Clinic
At de Pry Clinic Phitsanulok, Dr. Time always prices Karisma based on an assessment of your actual skin condition first. We don't sell ready-made packages that may be more or less than necessary. I'll propose a plan based on the amount and number of sessions suited to your problem, and clearly explain what the price includes.
If you're still not sure whether Karisma is worth it for you, or you'd like to compare it with other options like filler first, come in and talk — you don't have to decide that day.
Frequently Asked Questions
The Karisma pricing questions patients ask me most often — I've gathered them and answered them right here.
About how much does Karisma cost?
There's no fixed number; it depends on the amount, number of sessions, genuine product, and the doctor who assesses you. You should look at the full-course price. The most accurate way is to have a doctor assess your actual face and then quote a price.
Why isn't the price the same everywhere?
Because the amount, number of sessions, genuine product, and the injecting doctor differ. A much cheaper price may mean you get less or that something has been cut out.
Is it more worth it than filler?
If the problem is tired, dehydrated skin with shallow lines, Karisma fits better. But if you want obvious volume, filler may be more worth it. Base it mainly on your problem.
Why look at the full-course price?
Because Karisma focuses on restoring skin quality through continued treatment. Looking at a single session may mislead you. Viewing the whole course reflects the real cost and value.
Can it be done really cheaply?
Be cautious first. Genuine product has a clear cost. A price that's too low to be real often comes at the expense of non-genuine product, an incomplete amount, or a non-doctor injector.
Besides the product, what else am I paying for?
A good price should include the doctor's assessment, the choice of appropriate amount/placement, genuine product, and post-treatment follow-up — not just the cost of the product.
How do I check that it's genuine?
Ask to see the box and registration number before treatment, check it yourself at oryor.com, and confirm the injector is the doctor who actually assessed you.
Are there promotions or installment options?
It depends on the period and the place. I recommend asking directly, but look at genuine product and care first before looking at the discount.
References
The information I used to support this article comes from these sources. Feel free to click and read the originals yourself:
- PubMed (Randomized Controlled Trial) — Use of recombinant Type III collagen for facial skin rejuvenation (the rationale for value in terms of skin quality): pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
- PubMed — Recombinant Type III collagen microgel as an injectable for rejuvenating aging skin: pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
- PubMed — Injectable recombinant Type III collagen helps with sun-damaged skin (photoaging): pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
- FDA (Food and Drug Administration) — Verify whether a product is genuinely registered in Thailand before you pay: oryor.com
Want to know if Karisma is suitable and worth it for your skin? Let Dr. Time at de Pry Clinic Phitsanulok assess you and propose a price plan that fits you before you decide.
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