Plastic Surgery Philadelphia is the directory listing for Subbio Plastic Surgery and Med Spa, a private practice in Newtown Square in the greater Philadelphia area. Dr. Christian Subbio, a surgeon certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery, has run it since 2015. The practice carries the tagline "Become Art," which is a deliberate branding choice: aesthetics first, the surgeon positioned as the central draw. That board credential is not a minor footnote. Plastic surgery is one of the few fields where the gap between a real specialist and someone with a shorter course is measured in years of training, and Plastic Surgery Philadelphia puts the ABPS certification front and center on its pages.
The surgical menu at Plastic Surgery Philadelphia is broad and organized into three areas patients search by. Body procedures include tummy tuck, liposuction, the combined mommy makeover, post-weight-loss surgery for patients left with excess skin after major loss, and labiaplasty. Breast work covers augmentation, lift, reduction, revision of prior operations, and gynecomastia surgery for men. Facial surgery runs through facelift, eyelid surgery (blepharoplasty), buccal fat removal, chin and neck liposuction, and a lip lift. The lip lift and buccal fat removal are the kind of targeted facial procedures a generalist often passes over. Seeing them alongside the bigger operations points to a surgeon who works across the finer details of facial anatomy and gives weight to the smaller, more delicate procedures.
The med spa side of Plastic Surgery Philadelphia is where the listing becomes more interesting than a standard surgical practice. The non-surgical menu is deep: injectables covering Botox, dermal fillers, lip fillers, and Sculptra; a laser lineup including BroadBand Light, HALO, Moxi, and Forever Clear BBL; skin treatments running through microneedling, chemical peels, HydraFacial, Morpheus8, and dermaplaning. There is also semaglutide-based weight loss management, which has become a near-standard add-on for practices of this type over the past couple of years. The breadth here means a patient can start with something low-commitment, a peel or a round of Botox, and stay within the same practice if they later decide on surgery. That kind of continuity at Plastic Surgery Philadelphia is more reassuring than a clinic that only does major operations, because the team sees a face or a body over time instead of once on an operating table.
What the outside record looks like
RealSelf lists 127 patient reviews for Plastic Surgery Philadelphia, and Dr. Subbio has 2,128 expert answers logged on that same platform. That second number deserves attention. RealSelf expert answers are responses a surgeon writes to questions from the general public, and accumulating more than two thousand of them is a sustained, public-facing habit. A surgeon who answers strangers' questions at that volume, in the open, is doing something different from a practice that collects testimonials on its own site. Those answers stay online and can be read, fact-checked, and challenged by anyone.
The numbers stack up elsewhere. Yelp carries 21 reviews, Facebook shows 38 reviews with a 100 percent recommend rate, and Birdeye aggregates 685 reviews across sources. There is also an American Society of Plastic Surgeons profile with patient reviews attached, which doubles as a second confirmation of the board membership Plastic Surgery Philadelphia claims. No single platform is decisive, and a 100 percent rate on a smaller Facebook sample deserves a grain of salt, but the spread is consistent. When Plastic Surgery Philadelphia rates well across RealSelf, Yelp, Facebook, Birdeye, and a professional society profile simultaneously, the combined picture is harder to dismiss than a curated testimonials page.
One detail about the RealSelf record at Plastic Surgery Philadelphia is worth pausing on: the 2,128 expert answers outnumber the 127 patient reviews there by a ratio of roughly sixteen to one. That is an unusual proportion. Most practices accumulate far more patient reviews than physician answers, because the latter require ongoing effort with no guarantee of new business. A surgeon who invests at that rate in public-facing education is doing it for reasons beyond the obvious marketing logic, and it is a reasonable indicator of how Dr. Subbio operates day to day.
Contact and booking
On the contact side, Plastic Surgery Philadelphia makes things straightforward. The phone number and the West Chester Pike address sit prominently on the page, visible without scrolling or hunting. Booking runs through online consultation requests and a patient portal, covering people who would rather not call during office hours and want to arrange a first appointment on their own schedule. For a practice mixing walk-in-style med spa visits with major surgical consultations, having both a direct phone line and a self-service portal is the right setup for two quite different types of patient.
If there is a soft spot in the Plastic Surgery Philadelphia listing, it is the framing. "Become Art" leans hard into the aspirational, and a prospective patient who wants clinical plainness over branding will notice the marketing register before the medical substance. That is a tone preference rather than a flaw. The actual depth underneath it, a board-certified surgeon, a wide surgical menu, a full med spa, and a multi-platform review record running into the hundreds, is there and is checkable through the linked profiles. Plastic Surgery Philadelphia is a well-documented listing for a practice with a genuine specialist at its centre, and the outside record broadly matches what the page claims.

Business address
Subbio Plastic Surgery & Medspa
3734 West Chester Pike,
Newtown Square,
PA
19073
United States
Contact details
Phone: (610) 356-6100