About

What this publication is.

Sagging Skin is an independent review of skin tightening treatments. We exist to answer one plain question well: when skin starts to loosen, what actually firms and lifts it, and what only sounds like it should. Our coverage is reporting, not promotion.

Why we exist

Search for skin tightening and most of what surfaces is the same loop: rewritten clinic copy, affiliate posts chasing traffic, and before and after galleries selling a single machine. Sagging skin deserves calmer treatment than that. Laxity arrives in stages, the honest answer is usually a sequence of treatments rather than a one visit fix, and the most over marketed promise in the category is a surgical result without surgery. We try to say so clearly.

How we work

We read the literature and translate it into plain language: what radiofrequency, focused ultrasound, thread lifts, and topical retinoids each do, the stage of laxity each suits, and the point where a surgical lift becomes the better answer. When we point readers somewhere, it is to a primary source or an expert’s own published writing, never to a paid slot.

Editorial standards

We use cautious language. We say may help instead of cures, and we name the limits of every treatment we describe. We tell readers when something is still being studied, we cite primary sources when a claim warrants it, and we always encourage readers to seek qualified medical guidance about their own skin. This publication is not a substitute for medical advice.

Independence

Sagging Skin is independently run. We are not owned by a clinic, a device manufacturer, or a skincare brand, and we accept no payment for coverage or placement. That independence is the whole point: it is what lets us tell a reader when an expensive machine is not worth it for their particular stage of laxity, and when a cream and good sun protection will do more than a procedure.

Tips, corrections, or pitches: hello@saggingskin.co.