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How Much Does Filler Cost? 2026 Update in Phitsanulok — What Makes the Price Differ

June 12, 2026

How Much Does Filler Cost? 2026 Update in Phitsanulok — What Makes the Price Differ
Quick summary before we begin

The price of filler has no fixed number. In the market you'll see anything from a few thousand baht per cc up to tens of thousands. The reason it differs this much is that the price is made up of several factors — brand/model, number of cc, the area being injected, and the doctor who injects it — not just "the product." What the doctor most wants you to remember is that an abnormally cheap price is a danger signal, because it usually comes at the cost of fakes, substances that aren't genuine HA, or an injector who isn't a doctor. And "worth it" doesn't mean "cheapest" — it means genuine product + a real doctor + the right amount. In this article, Dr. Time will walk you through each factor in a straightforward way.

How much does filler cost? Why an exact number isn't possible

The first question patients message the doctor almost every day is, "How much does filler cost?" The doctor fully understands you want to know the number first, because when you try searching, it's very confusing — some places show promos of a few thousand baht per cc, some tens of thousands, sometimes differing tenfold. And you can't help wondering, "Why is it this different? Which one is good value, and which one is about to scam me?"

Let me answer honestly: giving an exact price without yet seeing your face, without knowing where you want to fix, and how many cc are needed, is genuinely hard. It's like asking "How much does a tailored suit cost" without knowing what fabric, what size, or what level of craftsmanship. So the most honest answer isn't a number floating in the air, but helping you understand "what determines the price," so you can judge for yourself whether the price you see is reasonable or suspicious.

What the doctor can do in this article is lay out every factor transparently, and then you'll be able to choose with more peace of mind.

What goes into the price of filler?

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Before going through each point, the doctor wants you to see the big picture first: the price of filler doesn't come from a single factor, but from a combination of 5 main things.

5main factors that set the price
1cc = the unit used to price it
100%should be genuine and verifiable

1. The brand and model of the filler

This is the factor that makes the price differ the most. Good filler is HA (Hyaluronic Acid) from brands that have passed certification standards — both the US FDA and the Thai FDA. These carry high costs of production, research, and quality control. Each brand also has many sub-models for thin and thick textures, and for shallow and deep points, so prices vary. As for products of "unknown origin" or fillers that aren't genuine HA, their cost is much lower, so they can be priced cheaply — but that's exactly the risk.

2. The number of cc used

Most filler is priced per cc (or per syringe, which is usually equal to 1 cc). The more cc used, the higher the total price actually goes. Some people only need a tiny bit to fix one spot; some want to adjust several areas and use more. This is the big reason each person's price isn't the same.

3. The injection area (difficulty and risk)

Some areas are easy and safe to inject; some are near important blood vessels and require deep anatomical knowledge and great care — such as around the eyes or the nose. Areas that are harder and riskier are therefore reflected in the price, because that is the "cost of skill and safety," not just the cost of the product.

4. The doctor's extensive experience

The person who assesses which brand, which model, how many cc you should use, and where to inject directly affects both the result and your safety. A doctor who has handled many cases will plan it to be "just right" and avoid risky points better. A price that includes care by a real doctor is therefore different from one where "anyone injects."

5. Genuine, verifiable product (box/QR/lot)

Genuine filler comes with a box, label, registration number, and many brands have a QR code/sticker to scan and confirm the lot. Having these verification systems is the cost of the "confidence" you pay for, and it's something abnormally cheap products usually don't provide.

Why is the price different for each person?

The doctor hears this question a lot — "Why did my friend pay this much, but you quoted me a different price?" The answer is because everyone's face is different, and the goals differ too.

  • The spots you want to fix differ — some people just fill a small groove a little, some want to adjust the face shape in several spots, so the amount of cc used differs.
  • The facial structure and original tissue differ — some people have a lot of volume loss and need more to see a proper result, some need only a little.
  • The suitable brand/model differs — a spot that needs to look very natural may suit a different filler texture than a spot that needs to stand firm.
  • The goal for naturalness differs — some people want a smooth, gradual change, so the planning differs from someone who wants a clearly visible result.

This is why the doctor always says an accurate filler price requires "assessing the real face" first. Directly comparing someone else's price to yourself can lead to misunderstanding. If you want to know roughly how many cc you'd use, you can read the "How many cc of filler" article alongside this.

How is an abnormally cheap price dangerous?

Now we reach the part the doctor is most concerned about and wants you to read to the end — when you see filler at a shockingly cheap price, many people feel like they've found a deal, but the doctor wants to invite you to think from another angle: "Good products have a real cost. If it's unbelievably cheap, it means something has been cut out."

An abnormally cheap price usually comes from one or several of these combined:

  • Fake filler — imitating famous brands, not in the FDA registry, with no one to certify what's inside.
  • Fillers that aren't HA — such as liquid silicone or foreign substances that can't be dissolved; once injected they stay permanently and cause long-term problems.
  • Not a full cc — advertising a cheap price per cc, but you actually get less than a full amount.
  • The injector isn't a doctor — a "quack injector" or staff member with no anatomical knowledge, which is the most dangerous point.
Why this risks your life and your face

Filler injected in the wrong place or into a blood vessel can cause tissue to lose its blood supply until it leads to tissue death (necrosis), or in severe cases even blindness. And if it's fake or a substance that isn't genuine HA, it can't be dissolved with an enzyme — lumps, inflammation, or infection will stay with you for a long time and be very hard to fix. Health organizations like the UK's NHS clearly warn that fillers carry risks and should only be done by qualified and experienced practitioners. Saving a few thousand baht is therefore not worth the risk at all.

Genuine filler vs. abnormally cheap filler

To make it clear, the doctor will compare why "genuine product at a reasonable price" and "abnormally cheap product" are worlds apart.

TopicGenuine filler (reasonable price)Abnormally cheap (suspicious)
Type of substanceGenuine HA from FDA/Thai FDA-approved brandsFake, or a substance that isn't HA and can't be dissolved
Origin verificationHas a box, label, registration number, QR/lotNone to show, or doesn't match when checked
InjectorA doctor who assesses and injects personallySomeone who isn't a doctor / a quack injector
AmountA full cc as agreed, assessed to be just rightMay not be full, or pushes you to add more than needed
If there's a problemCan be dissolved and fixed (for HA), with someone to care for you afterwardHard to fix, some things permanent, origin untraceable
What you pay forSafety + a result that can be cared forA risk that may stay with you for a long time
The doctor's simple way of thinking

When you see a price, ask yourself, "Does this price include a verifiable genuine product + the doctor injecting personally + a suitable amount?" If all three are there, the price is reasonable. If it's so cheap that these three can't all be present — that's a signal to step back and think first.

How to think about price for the best value? (Value ≠ cheapest)

The doctor wants you to shift your perspective a little. Most people search for "cheap filler," but what we actually want isn't "the cheapest," but "the best value" — and these two are not the same at all.

In the doctor's view, the value of filler is a simple equation:

Value = genuine product + a real doctor + the right amount
  • Genuine product — HA from FDA-approved brands, verifiable, not of unknown origin.
  • A real doctor — a doctor who assesses and injects personally, able to take responsibility for the result and safety.
  • The right amount — using only as much as necessary, not overfilling until it looks unnatural and wastes money.

The "cheapest" filler that's fake and injected by someone who isn't a doctor may in the end cost many times more to fix, or some things can't be fixed at all. Meanwhile, reasonably priced filler that meets all three of these is a truly worthwhile investment, because you get both the result and peace of mind in return.

What does a reasonable price include?

A reasonable price should include

  • Assessment of the real face and goals by a doctor
  • Choosing the suitable brand/model and number of cc
  • Genuine filler whose box/label/registration number you can ask to see
  • The doctor injecting personally + planning the positions safely
  • Follow-up care after the procedure

A suspiciously cheap price usually cuts out

  • No assessment, rushing to finish the injection
  • Not letting you see the box/label/registration number
  • May be fake or a substance that isn't HA
  • The injector isn't a doctor, or pushes you to add more than needed
  • No follow-up care when there's a problem

Check it's genuine before you pay

Before you pay and get on the bed, the doctor wants you to always do these 4 things — don't feel shy at all. A clinic that meets standards is happy to let you verify everything in person.

  1. Ask to see the box and label stating the brand/model — make sure it matches what was agreed, and have it opened in front of you.
  2. Scan the QR/check the registration number with the FDA yourself at oryor.com — it takes only a few minutes.
  3. Confirm that the injector is the doctor who actually assessed you, not an assistant or staff member.
  4. Ask clearly what the price includes — brand/model, how many cc, which positions, and whether there's follow-up.

If you want to know how to spot fake filler in detail at every observation point, read on in the "How to check for fake filler" article.

Get it done in Phitsanulok — de Pry Clinic

If you're in Phitsanulok or a nearby province and want to get filler with peace of mind under the care of a real doctor, de Pry Clinic (Depry Clinic) is happy to take care of you. Many of the doctor's patients travel from Phichit, Sukhothai, Uttaradit, Kamphaeng Phet, and Phetchabun because they want someone who assesses and injects personally with care, not just the cheapest place.

Here, Dr. Time will first assess your real face and your goals, then choose the suitable brand/model and amount, and after that present the price for the whole plan transparently, explaining what it includes and how many cc are used. The doctor uses only verifiable genuine products and injects personally in every case, and doesn't focus on persuading you to add a lot or pick the most expensive model, but chooses based on what truly suits you.

The doctor is committed to caring for patients like family, because the doctor believes good beauty must come with safety and peace of mind, not a risk you have to worry about later. If you'd like to see filler services and other treatments, you can view them on the our services page.

For a price that truly fits you, feel free to ask via LINE. Because everyone uses a different amount, the doctor always assesses first, so we can offer a price that matches what you really want — not a number floating in the air that could lead to misunderstanding.

Frequently asked questions

Here the doctor has gathered the questions about filler prices that patients ask most often.

How much does filler cost?

There's no fixed number. In the market you'll see anywhere from a few thousand baht per cc up to tens of thousands, depending on the brand/model, number of cc, position, genuineness, and the doctor. Let a doctor assess your real face and goals first, then offer a suitable price, because everyone uses a different amount.

Why does the price differ so much?

Because the price is made up of several factors, not just the product. The clearest difference is the brand/model (HA from FDA/Thai FDA-approved brands costs more than products of unknown origin), followed by the number of cc, the injection position, and the doctor's extensive experience.

Is a cheap price dangerous?

Very concerning. An abnormally cheap price usually comes from fakes, substances that aren't HA, less than a full cc, or an injector who isn't a doctor. The problems that follow can be lumps, inflammation, infection, or blocked blood vessels leading to tissue death — which are hard to fix and some permanent.

Is filler priced per cc or per whole plan?

Mostly per cc, but you should ask clearly how many cc the whole plan uses, what brand/model, and the total price. Beware of ads saying "very cheap per cc" that actually use a non-genuine product or push you to add many cc until it costs more than before.

What does a reasonable price include?

Assessment by a doctor, choosing the suitable brand/model and amount, a verifiable genuine product, the doctor injecting personally, and follow-up after the procedure — not just the cost of the product alone.

How do I check it's genuine?

Ask to see the box and label stating the brand/model and registration number before the procedure, scan the QR/check at oryor.com yourself, and confirm that the injector is the doctor who actually assessed you.

How many cc is enough?

It depends on each person's position and goals. "Using the right amount" matters more than "using a lot." Overfilling makes the face look unnatural and wastes money. Let a doctor assess how many cc are really needed.

How does de Pry Clinic in Phitsanulok set its prices?

Dr. Time assesses your real face first, chooses the suitable brand/model and amount, then presents the price for the whole plan transparently, using only genuine products and injecting personally in every case. Ask via LINE for a price that fits you.

References and verification

The doctor wants you to be able to verify the information the doctor uses yourself — these are the references this article draws from. Click to read the originals yourself:

  • Thai Food and Drug Administration (FDA) — the system for verifying health products and drug registrations, used to check whether the filler to be injected is a genuine product actually registered in Thailand: oryor.com
  • U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) — information on dermal fillers, which approved brands fall into which group, and why choosing a product that meets standards matters for price and safety: fda.gov
  • UK's NHS — guidance on dermal fillers and their risks, confirming it should be done by qualified and experienced practitioners (the reason an abnormally cheap price is risky): nhs.uk
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Dr. Nuathathaam Opharphinuth — de Pry Clinic, Phitsanulok

Your doctor

Dr. TimeDr. Nuathathaam Opharphinuth

de Pry Clinic, Phitsanulok

MD, Prince of Songkla UniversityMaster's — First-Class Honours (Gold Medal)PhD, United KingdomAmerican Board of Aesthetic Medicine (AAAM)ABAARM, USA
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