If you’ve been in aesthetics for more than five minutes, you already know the skin booster market has exploded. Every few months there’s a new product promising the glossiest, most hydrated skin your patients have ever seen. And honestly? Some of them genuinely deliver. Others, less so.

What Even Is a Skin Booster, and Why Do Patients Keep Asking for Them?
Skin boosters are injectable treatments that work primarily by delivering hydration deep into the dermis. Most are hyaluronic acid-based (though not all), and they work by attracting and retaining moisture within the skin’s structure, not by adding volume the way a traditional filler would. The result, when done well, is skin that looks genuinely healthier from the inside out. Better texture, improved elasticity, a kind of lit-from-within quality that no topical can replicate.
Patients are coming to you having seen results plastered across Instagram and TikTok. They’ve done their research, sort of. They’ve seen skin booster before and after content online and they want that. Your job is to guide them toward the right product for their skin concern, not just tick a treatment box.
The Main Players, and What’s Actually Worth Stocking
Profhilo
Profhilo is probably still the most recognised name in this space, and for good reason. It’s been around long enough that there’s solid clinical data behind it, and patients tend to respond well to the five-point bio-aesthetic remodelling technique (BAP) delivery method.
What sets Profhilo apart is its hybrid technology. It’s not just a HA filler injected superficially. It has an unusually high concentration of both high and low molecular weight hyaluronic acid, which allows it to spread through the tissue and stimulate collagen and elastin production. So you’re not just hydrating, you’re genuinely remodelling.
Realistic expectation: Two sessions, four weeks apart. Most patients see meaningful improvement after the second session. Some need a third to really get there.
Read more about Profhilo here: Profhilo Is The #1 Skin Booster For 7 Reasons!
Seventy Hyal 2000
Seventy Hyal 2000 has become a real workhorse in a lot of clinics, and it’s easy to see why. It’s a high-concentration HA skin booster (1.5% HA at 2000kDa) that’s delivered via micro-injections across the treatment area rather than the structured point technique you’d use with Profhilo.
The technique gives you more flexibility in terms of targeting specific areas of concern, and a lot of practitioners find it pairs well with other treatments. It’s also typically more accessible price-wise, which makes it a good option for patients who want to commit to a course of treatment without a significant financial barrier.
The results are genuinely impressive for skin texture and hydration. It’s not a collagen-stimulator in the same way Profhilo is, but for pure skin quality improvement, it holds its own.Ideal for: Younger patients with dehydrated or dull skin, or those new to injectables who want a lower-risk entry point into the world of skin booster injections.
Lumi Pro
Lumi Pro is worth having in your toolkit if you’re treating patients who want a more comprehensive approach. It combines HA with additional ingredients designed to support skin quality, including amino acids and antioxidants depending on the formulation.
For patients who come to you with multiple skin concerns, not just hydration but also dullness, uneven texture, or mild pigmentation, this kind of multifunctional product can simplify your treatment plan. One product, broader action.
It’s a solid option, particularly when patients want visible luminosity results and they want them relatively quickly.
Sunekos
Sunekos is a bit of a different animal and it’s worth explaining why. Unlike pure HA boosters, Sunekos combines low and high molecular weight hyaluronic acid with a patented amino acid formula that’s specifically designed to stimulate fibroblast activity and support the regeneration of the extracellular matrix.
In plain terms: it’s targeting the actual structure of the skin, not just the surface hydration. This makes it particularly useful for patients with more advanced signs of ageing, crepiness, loss of elasticity, hollow under-eyes, where you need more than moisture to see meaningful change.
The trade-off is that it requires a course of treatments (typically four, one week apart) before you see the full result. Patients need to be briefed on this up front. But those who commit to the full protocol often see some of the most dramatic improvements in skin quality.
Ideal for: More mature patients, periorbital concerns, patients with significant skin laxity.
Buy Sunekos Skin Boosters Online
Skin Boosters Compared: Profhilo, Seventy Hyal 2000, Lumi Pro & Sunekos
Not all skin boosters are created equal. Whether you’re looking for deep hydration, tissue tightening, or full cellular regeneration, choosing the right product makes all the difference. This guide breaks down four of the most popular skin boosters on the market, comparing ingredients, pricing, mechanisms, and key benefits, so you and your clients can make an informed choice.
| CATEGORY | PROFHILO | SEVENTY HYAL 2000 | LUMI PRO | SUNEKOS |
| Key Ingredients | HA 64mg/2ml — equal blend of high & low molecular weight HA via patented NAHYCO™ technology. Lidocaine 0.3%. | HA 90mg/6ml (30mg per syringe). High MW sodium hyaluronate (>2000 kDa), 1.5%, via bacterial fermentation. No chemical modification. | HA 40mg/2ml non-cross-linked sodium hyaluronate. Advanced hydration complex. Sterile pyrogen-free injectable. | HA + 6 amino acids — glycine, L-proline, L-lysine, L-alanine, L-valine & hydroxyproline — in a patented stoichiometric ratio. Non-cross-linked HA carrier. |
| Approx. Price | £64.89 – £249.00 | £26.90 – £100.00 | £15.00 – £59.00 | £79.90 – £90.00 |
| Mechanism | Bio-remodels tissue. Slow HA release stimulates 4 types of collagen & elastin. Spreads evenly from minimal injection points. | Replenishes depleted HA stores via high MW molecules. Stimulates collagen & elastin and adds gentle volume. | Delivers deep hydration into the dermis. Replenishes HA for moisture surge, firmness, and radiance. Secondary collagen stimulation. | Amino acids stimulate fibroblasts to produce collagen AND elastin via ECM regeneration. HA acts as carrier and volumiser. |
| Primary Benefits | Skin laxity, tightening, hydration, natural glow, bio-remodelling. Face, neck, décolletage, hands, body. | Deep hydration, texture, laxity correction, gentle volume, radiant glow. Face, neck, décolletage, hands, lips, body. | Intense hydration, radiance, firmness. Fast visible results within 48 hours. Face, neck, hands. | Skin regeneration, elasticity, ECM repair, fine line reduction, volume improvement. Face, neck, décolletage, hands, body. |
| Lidocaine | Yes — 0.3% included | No | No | No |
| Unique Strength | Highest HA concentration on the market. NAHYCO™ bio-remodelling delivers unmatched tissue tightening and laxity correction. | Highest MW HA (>2000 kDa). Most versatile — face, body, hands, lips. Full course in one box. | Most affordable. Fastest results (48 hrs). 40mg HA per 2ml — 33% higher than many competitors. Ideal entry-level booster. | Only booster with patented HA + amino acid formula. Stimulates true ECM regeneration — collagen AND elastin. Best for structural skin repair. |
Talking Patients Through Side Effects, Don’t Gloss Over This
One of the most common reasons patients feel let down post-treatment isn’t the result. It’s the downtime they weren’t warned about.
Skin booster side effects are generally mild and temporary, but they’re worth discussing properly in your consultation:
- Small blebs or papules at injection sites (particularly common with micro-injection techniques), usually resolving within 24 to 48 hours
- Bruising and swelling, which can be more pronounced in thinner-skinned areas like around the eyes
- Tenderness at injection sites
- Rare risk of infection or vascular occlusion, particularly relevant if you’re working near the eyes
The papule effect in particular can alarm patients if they haven’t been warned. I always tell them: “You may leave here looking like you’ve had an allergic reaction to something. By tomorrow morning, it’ll be mostly gone.” Managing this up front makes your aftercare calls much smoother.
Faces has already created a ready-made skin booster aftercare form for you. Login or register now to use our consent and aftercare forms.
How Long Do Skin Boosters Last?
This is the question every patient asks at the end of the treatment. And the honest answer is: it depends.
How long do skin boosters last varies by product, patient biology, lifestyle, and treatment frequency. As a general guide:
- Profhilo: Results typically last around six months, with a maintenance session recommended every six months after the initial course
- Seventy Hyal 2000: Similar longevity, three to six months depending on individual skin response
- Sunekos: Course results can last three to six months; patients with significant skin laxity may need more frequent top-ups
- Lumi Pro: Generally three to four months, though this varies
Patients who smoke, have significant UV exposure, or are under chronic stress tend to metabolise HA faster. Worth discussing lifestyle as part of your treatment plan.
Choosing the Right Product for Each Patient
Here’s the thing. There isn’t one “best” skin booster. There’s the best one for the patient sitting in front of you.
A 29-year-old with dehydrated skin after a stressful year is not the same patient as a 52-year-old concerned about crepiness and skin laxity. Neither is the same as a patient post-laser who needs to support the skin’s recovery.
Map your product selection to the concern:
- Pure hydration and glow: Seventy Hyal 2000
- Skin remodelling and biostimulation: Profhilo
- Structural regeneration in mature skin: Sunekos
- Multi-concern improvement with luminosity: Lumi Pro
Some practitioners (and I’d include myself in this) will combine products across a treatment plan. There’s good clinical rationale for this, using a collagen stimulator as your foundation and then maintaining with a pure hydration product, for instance.
For Practitioners Looking to Stock Up
If you’re expanding your offering or refreshing your product range, the quality of your supply chain matters. Products need to be stored correctly, sourced legitimately, and traceable. When you buy skin boosters for your clinic, make sure you’re purchasing from a reputable, verified supplier and not just chasing the lowest price.
The same applies when you buy skin booster injections for specific treatment protocols. Know what you’re getting, verify the cold chain, and make sure the product documentation is in order. When practitioners buy injectable skin boosters from established suppliers, they’re not just protecting their patients. They’re protecting their practice.
Your Next Best-Selling Treatment Starts Here
Ready to add skin boosters to your treatment menu, or expand the range you’re already offering?
Explore the full range of skin boosters available through Faces Consent, including Profhilo, Seventy Hyal 2000, Lumi Pro, and Sunekos. Faces Consent gives aesthetic clinics and healthcare practices everything they need in one place: booking, consent forms, prescription services, stock ordering and next day delivery. Register now and get your £100 for joining and activating booking system.
FAQs
Which skin booster is best for mature patients with significant skin laxity?
Sunekos is generally the first choice here because of its amino acid complex that supports extracellular matrix regeneration. It goes beyond hydration to address the structural changes that occur with age. Profhilo is also worth considering as a complementary treatment, particularly for remodelling and improving tissue quality alongside the regenerative work Sunekos does.
Can I combine different skin boosters in the same treatment plan?
Yes, and many experienced practitioners do. A common approach is to use a biostimulator like Profhilo or Sunekos as the foundation of the treatment plan, then maintain results with a hydration-focused product like Seventy Hyal 2000 or Lumi Pro. Just make sure you’re spacing treatments appropriately and getting informed consent for combination protocols.
How many sessions should I recommend to new patients?
It depends on the product, but as a starting point, most skin boosters require a minimum of two sessions to produce meaningful results, with some (like Sunekos) requiring a course of four. Always present this as a course of treatment from the outset rather than a single appointment. Patients who understand the commitment from the start are far more likely to be satisfied with the outcome.
Are skin boosters suitable for all skin types and tones?
Generally, yes. Skin boosters are well tolerated across skin types and Fitzpatrick tones. That said, always carry out a thorough consultation and consider any contraindications (active skin infections, autoimmune conditions, known HA hypersensitivity, pregnancy). For patients with darker skin tones, be particularly mindful of post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation risk if there is any significant bruising or trauma at injection sites.
What’s the difference between a skin booster and a moisturising filler?
This comes up a lot, especially as some HA fillers are being marketed in ways that blur the line. True skin boosters are designed to integrate into the dermis and improve overall skin quality, hydration, and in some cases stimulate collagen production. They’re not designed to add volume or projection. A moisturising filler, depending on the product, may be more viscous and provide some degree of volume alongside hydration. If your patient is asking for “plumpness,” clarify early whether they mean hydrated skin quality or actual volumisation, because those are different treatment goals requiring different products.