Facelifts here run $25,000 to $35,000 CAD on average, and the page that quotes that figure does not bury it three clicks deep or hide it behind a "request a consultation" wall. That candour about money set the tone for how I read the rest of Face Toronto: Facelift, because surgical pricing is the one number most aesthetic clinics will do anything to avoid printing. The page sits inside a wider practice run by Dr. Jamil Asaria, a certified facial plastic surgeon working out of 251 Davenport Rd. in the Yorkville part of downtown Toronto. The surgeon is named, the cost is on the table, and you have not committed to anything yet, which is more than a lot of cosmetic pages manage in their first screen.
Surgical focus on facial procedures
The first thing worth noting is that this is a focused operation. Plenty of clinics list facelifts alongside breast augmentation, liposuction, tummy tucks and whatever else fills a general plastic surgery schedule. Face Toronto: Facelift belongs to a practice that stays above the neck, and that narrowing of scope reads as a deliberate position, not an oversight. A surgeon who only works on faces is doing the same handful of procedures over and over, which is the kind of repetition you want from someone holding a scalpel near your eyelids. The site frames itself as a specialist facial aesthetic centre, and the menu backs that framing up instead of leaving it as a tagline.
The facelift page is the entry point, but the surgical range around it is broad within its lane: neck lift, brow lift, blepharoplasty for the eyelids, and chin and cheek augmentation. Rhinoplasty gets real attention too, split into female, male, and ethnic approaches. That split is a sensible distinction, because the goals and proportions differ enough between those groups that lumping them together would be sloppy. Hair restoration is part of the picture as well, with Face Toronto: Facelift listing FUE transplants, PRP, and eyebrow transplants, so the practice has thought about the whole upper face and scalp as a connected set of concerns. The surgical offering covers what a facial specialist should handle and nothing that strays outside it.
Non-surgical options and filler brands
Sitting underneath the surgery is a medical spa menu that handles the non-surgical end. Botox and dermal fillers are there, and Face Toronto: Facelift names the filler brands specifically: Juvederm, Restylane, and Radiesse. Naming the products is worth something, because filler is not a generic commodity and a clinic that tells you which products it stocks is treating patients as people who might want to know. Laser treatments, chemical peels, microneedling, and a line of skin care products round it out, keeping the whole practice useful to a patient at almost any stage.
What stands out about the layout is that the surgical and the injectable sides are kept distinct instead of blurred into one vague "rejuvenation" pitch. A person considering a $30,000 facelift and a person booking a Botox touch-up are in very different places. Face Toronto: Facelift presents them as different decisions with different stakes, and that clarity does quiet work in building trust. You are not being upsold from a peel into surgery; the two live on their own terms.
Patient reviews across independent platforms
The outside record for Face Toronto: Facelift is unusually deep for a single-surgeon practice. On RateMDs, Dr. Asaria carries a 4.6 out of 5 rating. RealSelf, which is the platform that gets the most traction in cosmetic surgery because its users are researching procedures rather than venting, lists 264 patient reviews along with 440 expert answers from the practice. That second number is telling. Answering 440 questions on a public forum is a lot of unpaid time, and surgeons who do it tend to be the ones comfortable being scrutinised. It is one of the more credible things attached to Face Toronto: Facelift when you go looking beyond the clinic's own pages.
Birdeye adds more volume, with 391 reviews aggregated for the clinic, plus a separate Birdeye listing for Dr. Asaria himself sitting at 4.2 stars across 80 reviews. The aggregate clinic rating was not visible in what I could pull, so I will not pretend to a number I did not see. Across several independent sources the ratings cluster in the low-to-mid four-star band, which is roughly where a busy, competent cosmetic practice lands. Nobody pleases everyone in elective surgery, and a wall of flawless fives would be more suspicious than a steady 4.2 to 4.6. The spread feels like real patients, not a managed score.
Hundreds of reviews spread across RateMDs, RealSelf, and Birdeye are difficult to stage, and the fact that they sit on platforms Face Toronto: Facelift does not control adds weight. For a procedure this expensive and this irreversible, that track record is what would matter most to me, more than any claim the site makes about itself.
Contact information and pricing transparency
Contact is straightforward in a way that supports the whole picture. Two phone numbers sit prominently: a toll-free (888) line and a local (416) Toronto number, alongside the full civic address. Email runs through a contact form with no published address, which is normal. A clinic that prints its street location and a callable phone number is not hiding, and for surgery you want to know exactly which building you are walking into. On that front Face Toronto: Facelift gives you what you need. The practice turns up under the same name in this business directory and the review platforms, and the picture holds steady across all of them.
One thing worth flagging: a facelift page leading with a $25,000 to $35,000 range is honest but also a filter. This is not a budget option, and Face Toronto: Facelift does not pretend otherwise. The pricing is framed as an average, which means the real figure depends on the consultation and the scope of work, so treat that band as a starting point. The number on the page opens a conversation; the consultation is where it moves in either direction depending on what is being corrected.
Specialist approach versus general clinics
Toronto is not short on facial surgery, and the obvious comparison is a place like the Toronto Cosmetic Surgery Institute, which spreads across face, body, and breast work under one roof. Against that kind of full-service clinic, Face Toronto: Facelift makes its case on concentration: one certified facial plastic surgeon, a menu that never strays below the chin, and a deep public review history tied to that single name. A generalist surgeon may suit someone planning several procedures across the body, and there is nothing wrong with that route.
For a face-only concern, narrowing the field to a specialist who does this work daily is a reasonable instinct. The transparent pricing, the named filler brands, and the willingness to log 440 answers on RealSelf all push in the same direction. Face Toronto: Facelift has set itself up to be checked, and on the published evidence Face Toronto: Facelift is a credible name on any shortlist. Book the consultations any surgery of this scale deserves before deciding anything.
Business address
Face Cosmetic Surgery Toronto
186 St George St. ,
Toronto,
Ontario
M5R 2N3
Canada
Contact details
Phone: 416-479-4244