PRP Microneedling Full Body Treatment: Face, Neck, Décolleté, and Hands for $200

Here's a mistake I see constantly in the anti-aging industry, and I've written about it before because it bothers me enough to keep bringing up: treating the face while completely ignoring the neck, the chest, and the hands.

Your face doesn't end at your jawline. When someone looks at you — across a table, on a video call, in a photograph — they're taking in your face, your neck, and your décolletage as one continuous visual field. These areas age together. They get the same UV exposure together. And when only one of them gets professional treatment, the result is a strange visual disconnect: a carefully maintained face attached to a neck and chest that reveal the actual timeline, and hands that reveal it even more clearly than that.

This is the reasoning behind treating all four zones — face, neck, décolletage, and hands — in a single PRP microneedling session at my studio, for $200. Not because it's a marketing bundle. Because of how PRP actually works, and because the cost structure of the treatment makes this comprehensive approach genuinely efficient rather than an upsell.

The Blood Draw Economics — Why Four Zones Cost the Same as One

I want to start with something most clients don't think to ask about, because it explains why this treatment can cover four distinct areas of the body at a single price point that many clinics charge for face alone.

PRP — Platelet-Rich Plasma — requires drawing a small amount of your own blood and processing it through a centrifuge to separate and concentrate the platelets, which contain the growth factors that drive the treatment's regenerative effect. This blood draw and centrifuge processing is the most resource-intensive, equipment-dependent part of the entire procedure. It happens once per session, regardless of how many areas of your body receive the resulting PRP.

Once that PRP is prepared, it can be applied across multiple treatment zones in the same appointment — the cost driver (the draw, the centrifuge cycle, the processing kit) doesn't multiply by the number of areas treated. What changes from a single-face treatment to a comprehensive four-zone treatment is the microneedling time and the volume of PRP needed, which is a comparatively smaller cost than the blood processing infrastructure itself.

This is why a $200 face-and-neck PRP microneedling treatment can become a $200 face, neck, décolletage, and hands treatment without the price scaling proportionally with each additional area — the most expensive part of the treatment has already been accounted for in the base price. Clients researching the broader market sometimes find quotes of $900 to $1,200 per session for face-and-neck PRP alone at other clinics; extending that same scope to décolletage and hands at those price structures would push costs considerably higher. The math at my studio works differently because the underlying procedure economics work differently when you understand what's actually driving the cost.

What PRP Actually Does — The Biology, Not the "Vampire Facial" Marketing

PRP microneedling has been nicknamed the "vampire facial" in popular media, which is a memorable but reductive description that obscures what's actually happening biologically.

Blood plasma contains platelets — small cell fragments whose primary known function is blood clotting, but which also store and release a concentrated payload of growth factors when activated. These include epidermal growth factor (EGF), which stimulates skin cell proliferation and accelerates healing; platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), which recruits and activates fibroblasts — the cells responsible for collagen production; transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-β), which regulates collagen synthesis and tissue remodeling; and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), which stimulates the formation of new blood vessels, improving circulation to the treated tissue.

Standard whole blood contains these growth factors at baseline concentration. The centrifuge process used to prepare PRP separates and concentrates the platelet-rich fraction of the plasma, typically achieving platelet concentrations several times higher than baseline blood. When this concentrated PRP is applied to skin during microneedling — introduced into the micro-channels created by the needling device while they're open — the growth factors are delivered directly into the dermis, at the exact location and moment where the body's own wound-healing response to the microneedling injury is beginning.

The result is a combination effect: the mechanical micro-injury from microneedling triggers the skin's natural collagen-synthesis healing cascade, and the concentrated growth factors from PRP amplify that cascade directly, at the cellular level, using signaling molecules your own body produces rather than synthetic or biomimetic substitutes. This is meaningfully different from standard microneedling with a cosmetic serum — the growth factors in PRP are doing biological signaling work that peptide serums approximate but don't replicate at the same concentration or with the same biological specificity, since they're literally your own cells' communication molecules rather than an external approximation of them.

Why the Neck Needs Its Own Conversation — Not Just an Extension of the Face

Neck skin is structurally different from facial skin in ways that matter for how it ages and how it should be treated.

The skin on the neck is significantly thinner than facial skin, with fewer sebaceous glands producing the protective oils that help facial skin resist environmental damage. This means the neck has less natural defense against the cumulative effects of sun exposure, less oil-based moisture retention, and a faster visible progression of collagen loss once it begins.

South Florida's climate compounds this. The constant humidity affects skin's moisture balance in ways that can contribute to uneven texture, particularly on thinner-skinned areas like the neck and décolletage. The active outdoor lifestyle that defines life here — golf, tennis, boating, beach days — means significant additional sun exposure to an area that most people protect far less consistently than their face. Most clients who are diligent about facial SPF apply it inconsistently or not at all to the neck, which receives just as much UV exposure.

The result, over years, is the specific disconnect I described at the start: a face that's been actively maintained — skincare, professional treatments, sun protection — attached to a neck that's been left to age according to its own unmanaged timeline. PRP microneedling applied specifically to the neck addresses this directly: stimulating collagen production in the thinner neck dermis, improving the texture irregularities that humidity and sun exposure create, and bringing the neck's treatment history into alignment with the face's.

The Décolletage — Why South Florida Specifically Makes This Area Vulnerable

The décolletage — the upper chest area, typically from the base of the neck to where a low neckline sits — deserves specific attention because it combines the structural vulnerability of neck-type skin with a pattern of sun exposure that's particularly intense in South Florida.

Chest skin shares the thin dermis and reduced sebaceous gland density of neck skin, with correspondingly slower healing capacity and reduced natural protection. But the décolletage often shows even more dramatic visible sun damage than the neck specifically because of how it's exposed: low necklines in social and professional settings, consistent exposure during beach and pool activities, and — candidly — years of applying sunscreen less rigorously to the chest than to the face, because it's less visually central to how most people think about their appearance day to day.

The visible consequence is a specific pattern: brown spots and uneven pigmentation from cumulative UV exposure, redness and visible small blood vessels from sun-damaged capillaries near the surface, textural roughness and crepiness from collagen loss in already-thin skin, and sometimes a generally aged appearance that contrasts noticeably with a well-maintained face and even a well-maintained neck.

PRP microneedling addresses these décolletage concerns through the same combined mechanism described above: collagen stimulation that thickens and firms the thinning dermis, accelerated cellular turnover that gradually fades sun spots as damaged cells are replaced, textural improvement as the rebuilt collagen matrix provides better structural support, and more even tone as healthy tissue regeneration replaces sun-damaged tissue. I see consistent client interest in including the décolletage specifically — for many of my Boca Raton clients, the chest has been bothering them for years without an obvious treatment pathway, because most aesthetic marketing focuses overwhelmingly on the face.

The Hands — Aging That Shows Even More Clearly Than the Neck

I've written before about how the hands reveal aging timeline more accurately than almost any other part of the body, and the reasons are specific to South Florida living.

Hand skin is thin, has minimal subcutaneous fat cushioning, and receives substantial cumulative UV exposure — particularly the left hand for drivers, which spends years receiving sun through the car window during daily commutes. Hands are washed repeatedly throughout the day, often with drying products, and rarely receive the SPF protection that faces get. The combination produces visible aging that's frequently more advanced than facial aging in the same person: prominent veins and tendons visible through thinning skin, brown spots from UV exposure, and a generally fragile, papery skin quality.

PRP microneedling applied to the hands works through the identical mechanism as on the face and neck: micro-injury triggers the collagen healing cascade, PRP growth factors amplify that response, and over a treatment series the skin thickens, firms, and develops better structural support that reduces the visibility of veins and tendons and improves the overall texture and tone. Clients who add hand treatment to their PRP session frequently describe it as addressing a concern they'd assumed had no real treatment option beyond hand cream — which, frankly, doesn't reach the dermal level where this kind of structural change actually happens.

What a Comprehensive PRP Session Looks Like

A full face, neck, décolletage, and hands PRP microneedling session at my studio runs longer than a face-only treatment — typically two and a half to three hours — because of the additional treatment area and the careful technique adjustments each zone requires.

The session begins with a blood draw, processed through the centrifuge while we proceed with the consultation and skin analysis across all four treatment zones. Topical numbing is applied to each area in sequence, with adequate time — twenty to thirty minutes per area — before the microneedling begins, since rushing the numbing step on a treatment of this scope compromises comfort significantly.

The microneedling technique is adjusted by zone: facial skin tolerates one depth range; the thinner neck and décolletage skin require shallower, more careful passes; the hands, with their unique skin thickness and underlying tendon and vein structure, require their own calibrated approach. The PRP, once processed and ready, is applied during the needling passes across each zone, allowing the growth factors to enter the micro-channels as they're created.

After the full treatment sequence, a calming application is applied across all treated areas, followed by detailed aftercare instructions — slightly different for each zone given the different healing rates of facial, neck, décolletage, and hand skin.

The Honest Comparison to Doing Each Area Separately

I want to address directly why treating all four zones in one comprehensive session, rather than separately over multiple appointments, makes practical sense beyond just the cost efficiency.

Doing face, neck, décolletage, and hands as separate appointments means separate blood draws, separate consultations, separate numbing periods, and — critically — separate recovery windows spread across more calendar time. For a client managing a busy South Florida life, consolidating this into a single comprehensive session means one recovery period instead of four, one round of aftercare instructions to follow instead of four separate sets, and treatment results that develop on the same timeline across all areas — which produces a more cohesive overall improvement than treating areas months apart and ending up with mismatched stages of improvement across your face, neck, chest, and hands.

The trade-off is that a single comprehensive session requires a longer appointment and asks more of your tolerance for a single extended treatment day. For most clients, this trade-off favors the comprehensive approach — but for clients who prefer to start with just the face and assess their response before committing to the full scope, that's a completely reasonable way to begin, with neck, décolletage, and hands added in a subsequent session once you know how your skin responds to PRP microneedling generally.

Realistic Expectations and Timeline

The results from PRP microneedling, across all four zones, follow the same collagen-remodeling timeline that the treatment's mechanism predicts. The first one to two weeks show typical post-procedure healing — redness, mild swelling, surface flaking as the skin renews. Weeks three through six bring the early collagen response, with skin starting to look firmer and more even across all treated zones. The peak collagen synthesis effect, drawing on the amplified growth factor signaling from PRP, develops over two to three months, which is when the most significant before-and-after comparison becomes apparent.

For comprehensive aging concerns spanning face, neck, décolletage, and hands, a series of three sessions spaced four to six weeks apart produces substantially more complete results than a single session — each treatment adds to the collagen foundation built by the previous one. Maintenance after the initial series, typically every six to twelve months, sustains the improvement as natural aging and ongoing UV exposure continue their slower background effect.

What I tell clients honestly: this comprehensive approach won't eliminate the visible signs of years spent in South Florida's sun. It will produce skin — across all four treated areas — that's measurably firmer, more even in tone, better textured, and more cohesive in how it presents alongside the other treated areas, so the disconnect between a well-maintained face and an unmaintained neck, chest, or hands doesn't exist anymore.

PRP Microneedling for Face, Neck, Décolleté, and Hands is $200 per comprehensive session. Free consultations at heragencyusa.com — Phenix Salon Suites, 7112 Beracasa Way, Suite 119, Boca Raton. Serving Delray Beach, Coral Springs, Coconut Creek, Parkland, Pompano Beach, and across South Florida.

Frequently Asked Questions: PRP Microneedling Full Body Treatment in Boca Raton

Q1: What is included in the $200 PRP Microneedling treatment at Her Agency?

The $200 PRP Microneedling treatment at Her Agency includes a single blood draw and centrifuge processing to prepare platelet-rich plasma, which is then applied during microneedling across face, neck, décolletage, and hands in one comprehensive session. The price covers the consultation and skin analysis, topical numbing for each treatment zone, the microneedling procedure with PRP infusion calibrated for each area's specific skin thickness and concerns, and post-treatment calming application with aftercare instructions. The treatment runs approximately two and a half to three hours given the expanded treatment area. This comprehensive scope is possible at this price point because the most resource-intensive part of PRP treatment — the blood draw and centrifuge processing — is a single fixed cost regardless of how many body areas receive the resulting plasma, unlike facilities that price each treatment zone separately.

Q2: Why treat the neck and décolletage along with the face — isn't facial treatment enough?

Facial skin and neck/décolletage skin age together and are seen together, but they're frequently treated separately or not at all beyond the face — creating a visible disconnect between well-maintained facial skin and an aging neck and chest. Neck and décolletage skin is structurally thinner than facial skin, with fewer sebaceous glands and less natural protection, which means it shows collagen loss, sun damage, and textural changes faster and more visibly once aging begins. In South Florida specifically, the active outdoor lifestyle and consistent UV exposure to the neck and chest — areas typically protected with SPF far less rigorously than the face — accelerates this disconnect. Treating face, neck, and décolletage together in a single PRP microneedling session addresses all three areas with the same mechanism on the same timeline, producing a cohesive overall improvement rather than a face that looks rejuvenated next to a neck and chest that reveal the actual aging timeline.

Q3: Does PRP microneedling really help with sun damage on the chest and décolletage?

Yes, through the combined mechanism of mechanical collagen induction and PRP growth factor amplification. The décolletage is particularly prone to visible sun damage in South Florida due to low necklines, beach and pool activity, and less consistent sunscreen application compared to the face. PRP microneedling addresses this through collagen production that thickens and firms thinning, sun-damaged skin; accelerated cellular turnover that gradually fades brown spots and uneven pigmentation as damaged cells are replaced by healthier tissue; textural improvement from the rebuilt collagen matrix providing better structural support; and more even tone through healthy tissue regeneration replacing sun-damaged areas. Results develop progressively over a treatment series, with the most significant improvement visible two to three months after each session as collagen synthesis peaks, and cumulative improvement building across a recommended series of three sessions.

Q4: Can PRP microneedling improve the appearance of aging hands?

Yes. Hand skin is thin with minimal subcutaneous fat and receives substantial cumulative UV exposure, particularly through years of driving with sun exposure to the hands, while rarely receiving the consistent SPF protection applied to the face. This produces visible aging — prominent veins and tendons through thinning skin, brown spots, fragile texture — that often appears more advanced than facial aging in the same person. PRP microneedling on the hands works through the same mechanism as facial treatment: controlled micro-injury triggers the collagen healing cascade, concentrated PRP growth factors amplify that response, and over a treatment series the skin thickens and firms, reducing the prominence of visible veins and tendons and improving overall texture. Many clients who add hand treatment to their PRP session report addressing a concern they'd assumed had no real professional treatment option, since hand creams don't reach the dermal level where structural improvement actually occurs.

Q5: How does PRP microneedling work — what makes it different from regular microneedling?

Regular microneedling creates controlled micro-injuries that trigger the skin's natural wound-healing response, producing new collagen and elastin through the body's standard repair process. PRP microneedling adds a concentrated dose of your own blood's growth factors to this process. Platelet-rich plasma, prepared by drawing blood and processing it through a centrifuge to concentrate the platelet fraction, contains epidermal growth factor (EGF), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF), transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-β), and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) — biological signaling molecules that directly amplify fibroblast activation, collagen synthesis, and new blood vessel formation. Applied during microneedling while the micro-channels are open, these growth factors reach the dermis directly, intensifying the collagen response beyond what mechanical injury alone produces. Because PRP uses your own biological material rather than a synthetic or cosmetic serum, the growth factor signaling is biologically specific in a way that approximated peptide formulations don't fully replicate.

Q6: How many PRP microneedling sessions are needed for face, neck, décolletage, and hands?

For comprehensive aging concerns across all four zones, a series of three sessions spaced four to six weeks apart produces substantially better results than a single treatment. Each session's collagen synthesis builds on the foundation established by the previous session — the cumulative effect across a series is meaningfully greater than three times a single session's individual benefit, because the tissue is progressively better supported with each treatment. The collagen response from each session peaks at two to three months, which is the appropriate point to assess whether continuing to the next session in the series, or moving to a maintenance schedule, makes sense for your specific results. After completing an initial series, maintenance sessions every six to twelve months sustain the improvement against ongoing natural aging and UV exposure.

Q7: Is it better to treat face, neck, décolletage, and hands together or separately?

Treating all four zones together in one comprehensive session has practical advantages: a single blood draw and recovery period instead of four separate ones, and treatment results developing on the same timeline across all areas, which produces a more cohesive overall appearance than treating zones months apart and ending up with mismatched stages of improvement. The trade-off is a longer single appointment (two and a half to three hours) and a more extended single recovery period covering all treated areas simultaneously. For clients who prefer to start more conservatively, beginning with face-only treatment and assessing your response before adding neck, décolletage, and hands in a subsequent session is a reasonable alternative — particularly for clients new to PRP microneedling who want to understand how their skin responds before committing to the comprehensive scope.

Q8: How does the cost of comprehensive PRP microneedling compare to other anti-aging treatments?

Comprehensive PRP microneedling for face, neck, décolletage, and hands at $200 per session compares favorably to several alternative approaches when evaluated over a full treatment series and annual cost. A complete series of three sessions runs $600, with maintenance sessions every six to twelve months after that. By comparison, many Boca Raton clients report spending $3,000 to $5,000 annually on high-end skincare products with limited visible structural results, $4,000 to $6,000 annually maintaining Botox and filler with results lasting only three to six months per treatment, $2,000 to $5,000 for a single aggressive laser resurfacing session, or $6,000 to $15,000 for a surgical neck lift with substantial recovery and risk. PRP microneedling's comprehensive, natural collagen-building approach delivers results across a broader area (face, neck, décolletage, and hands together) for considerably less total investment than these alternatives, while results from a completed series can last twelve to eighteen months before maintenance is needed.

Q9: What does recovery look like after a comprehensive PRP microneedling session?

Recovery follows a predictable timeline across all treated zones, though the neck, décolletage, and hands generally show slightly less initial redness than the face due to differences in skin vascularity. The first 24 to 48 hours bring redness similar to a moderate sunburn across treated areas, with mild swelling possible particularly around the eyes if the face was treated. Days three through seven bring light surface flaking as the skin renews — this should not be picked or scrubbed. By day seven, most clients are back to their full normal routine across all treated areas. Specific aftercare during the healing period: no makeup or skincare products except what's provided for the first 24 hours, no sun exposure or sweating for 48 hours, no exfoliating acids or retinoids for five to seven days, and consistent SPF starting once initial healing is complete — particularly important for the neck, décolletage, and hands, which often receive less consistent sun protection than the face even after professional treatment.

Q10: Where can I get comprehensive PRP microneedling for face, neck, décolletage, and hands in Boca Raton?

Her Agency at Phenix Salon Suites, 7112 Beracasa Way, Suite 119, Boca Raton, FL 33433 offers PRP Microneedling covering face, neck, décolletage, and hands in a single comprehensive session for $200, performed by a twelve-year medical esthetician who structures the treatment to address all visible aging areas as a unified concern rather than treating the face in isolation. The consultation assesses each zone individually and determines the appropriate treatment depth and approach for the specific skin thickness and concerns present in each area. Services are available to clients throughout South Florida: Delray Beach, Coral Springs, Coconut Creek, Parkland, Pompano Beach, Deerfield Beach, and Fort Lauderdale. When comparing comprehensive PRP microneedling options near you, ask specifically whether neck, décolletage, and hands are included in the base price or charged as separate add-ons — this distinction significantly affects the total cost of comprehensive treatment. Consultations and bookings available at heragencyusa.com.

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