Patients researching facial surgery in Texas will run into Facial Plastic Surgery Austin fairly quickly, and what the practice puts forward is more specific than the average cosmetic clinic page. Dr. Sarah Saxon is a double board-certified facial plastic surgeon with offices in Austin and Dallas. Board certification alone does not settle anything, but dual certification in a face-specific specialty is a narrower credential than general cosmetic surgery, and it is the kind of background that at least narrows the field of candidates worth looking at seriously.

The surgical menu at Facial Plastic Surgery Austin is long and detailed in the right ways. Rhinoplasty, deep plane facelift, neck lift, eyelid surgery, brow lift, and otoplasty are all listed. So are chin procedures including sliding genioplasty, facial implants, fat injections, buccal fat removal, and lip lift. The practice also names brow bone reduction, hairline lowering, and Adam's apple reduction, and states a specialty in facial feminization surgery. That last one is worth noting. Facial feminization is technically demanding, multi-stage work that many facial surgeons decline to take on. A practice at Facial Plastic Surgery Austin that lists it as a stated focus is making a meaningful claim about its training, not filling out a menu with procedures it rarely performs. Evaluating whether the outcomes back that claim is something a prospective patient does in person, but the breadth here reflects real scope rather than generic marketing.

Outside the operating room, Facial Plastic Surgery Austin offers a full non-surgical menu. Neuromodulators and dermal fillers cover the injectable side. For skin, there is HALO laser resurfacing, microneedling, IPL/BBL, plus named tightening devices: Exilis Ultra, Facetite, and Morpheus8. Regenerative offerings include PRF, exosomes, and nanofat injection. These last items sit on newer and thinner clinical evidence than the established surgical procedures, and a patient weighing them should approach that category differently. Hair restoration and body contouring are also on the list, and two skincare lines, Alastin and SkinBetter, are sold on-site. Naming specific devices and product lines, rather than gesturing at "advanced technology," gives a prospective patient something concrete to look up independently.

Credentials and supporting content

Dr. Saxon previously held a faculty position as Assistant Professor at UT Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, one of the better-regarded academic medical centers in the country. A teaching appointment means her peers found her competent to train surgical residents, which is a different kind of endorsement than a testimonials page or a before/after gallery. Facial Plastic Surgery Austin references this history without leaning on it too hard, which reads as a reasonable presentation of credentials.

The supporting material around the procedures is more practical than what most practices publish. A before/after gallery is present, which for facial surgery is close to essential: results are visual, and a patient learns more from an honest photo set than from any amount of descriptive copy. Surgery preparation guides explain what to expect before and after procedures. Patient financing information is laid out clearly. An educational blog and online consultation booking are both available. A practice that publishes prep guides is doing some of the work of managing expectations before anyone books, and that is worth something.

On the question of breadth, Facial Plastic Surgery Austin offers an unusually wide menu for a practice whose name centers on the face. A patient considering a deep plane facelift or rhinoplasty should clarify at consultation which procedures Dr. Saxon performs personally versus what is handled by staff or devices. The site frames facial surgery as the core offering, and that is the logical read, but it is a direct question worth asking before anything is scheduled. The regenerative treatments in particular are an area where the evidence base is newer and the claims can outrun the data.

Reputation picture

The outside review record for Facial Plastic Surgery Austin is modest in volume, and patients should approach it with that in mind. The Austin Yelp page has 15 reviews and 60 photos. Sharecare shows 24 reviews averaging 3.2 out of 5. Healthgrades has reviews present without a pinned count. The Facebook page has 879 likes and 181 check-ins. RealSelf hosts patient reviews and before/after photos for Facial Plastic Surgery Austin, though a specific number of reviews did not surface in the search. The practice appears in the Better Business Bureau directory but is not accredited and has no BBB rating on file.

That 3.2 on Sharecare is the one figure here worth pausing on. It is a middling score, not a damning one, but it is also not the number a practice in a competitive market wants representing it. The review volume overall is on the lighter side for a two-city surgical practice. A prospective patient would do well to read the actual text of the lower-scoring reviews before drawing any conclusion, since aggregate numbers on their own rarely explain what went wrong.

The contact setup at Facial Plastic Surgery Austin is clear. The Austin office has a phone number and a street address on US Highway 290. The Dallas office has the same on Milton Street. Online appointment requests can be submitted directly from the homepage. Two staffed locations with distinct contact lines read as a real operating practice, and the transparency removes one of the easier reasons to hesitate when deciding whether to book an initial consultation.

Weighed together, Facial Plastic Surgery Austin is a focused facial surgery practice with a credentialed surgeon, a detailed procedure menu, and supporting content that respects a patient's need to plan. The outside review record is limited and mixed enough that nobody should skip reading the actual platform reviews before deciding anything. Taken as a whole, Facial Plastic Surgery Austin makes a reasonable case through Dr. Saxon's academic and surgical background, the specificity of what is on offer, and the transparency of a two-office operation with clear contact information. Whether that is enough depends on what the before/after photos show for the specific procedure and what the surgeon reveals in person. Facial Plastic Surgery Austin gives serious candidates enough to go on.


Business address
Saxon MD Facial Plastic Surgery
1100 Nueces St,
Austin,
TX
78701
United States

Contact details
Phone: (512) 537-4191