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Coronal Brow Lift

The classic, most powerful brow-lifting operation — an ear-to-ear scalp incision that elevates the whole forehead and reaches the frown-line muscles directly; compared here with the endoscopic approach.

Medically reviewed by EyePlastics Medical Editorial BoardASOPRS oculoplastic surgeonsLast updated June 2026

Coronal Brow Lift

The coronal brow lift is the classic, most powerful brow-lifting operation. It uses a single incision running from ear to ear across the top of the scalp, hidden within the hair, to lift the entire brow and forehead. It provides the most complete and predictable elevation of any brow technique — and it gives direct access to the muscles that create frown lines. Today it has largely been replaced by the smaller-incision endoscopic approach for most patients, but it remains the right choice in specific situations.

This is a focused companion to our main Brow Lift guide, which compares all of the brow-lifting techniques side by side.

How the Coronal Brow Lift Works

The incision is placed across the top of the scalp, roughly 5–6 cm behind the hairline, well within the hair-bearing skin so the scar is concealed. The forehead soft tissue is lifted, the descended brow is repositioned upward, and the incision is closed. In the same exposure the surgeon can reach and weaken the corrugator and procerus muscles — the muscles responsible for the vertical "11" lines between the brows — softening glabellar frown lines directly.

At a glance:

  • Incision hidden within the hair-bearing scalp, ear to ear
  • Provides roughly 1–2 cm of brow elevation — the most of any technique
  • Elevates the entire forehead symmetrically
  • Direct access to the frown-line muscles

Who Is a Candidate

The coronal lift shines when maximum, reliable elevation is needed and the hairline can conceal the scar. It is not ideal for:

  • Patients with a high hairline, because the incision (and the tissue it removes) tends to raise the hairline further
  • Patients with male-pattern baldness or thinning hair, where the scar would not stay hidden

Its main trade-off is a longer incision and a risk of numbness of the scalp behind the incision, which may be temporary or, less often, permanent. For patients with a normal or low hairline who want less scarring, the endoscopic brow lift — three to five short incisions and a camera — usually achieves the goal with less downtime.

Coronal vs. Endoscopic

The endoscopic brow lift has largely replaced the coronal approach as the preferred technique for patients with a normal or low hairline: it uses several small incisions, a magnified endoscopic view of the deep plane, and fixation devices to hold the lifted brow. The coronal lift still wins on raw lifting power and on direct muscle access, so it remains valuable for heavier brows, revision cases, or when the endoscopic approach cannot deliver enough elevation. An examination of your brow position, hairline, and forehead height determines which fits.

When to See a Specialist

Heavy, descended brows that crowd the upper eyelids — sometimes mistaken for excess eyelid skin alone — are best assessed by a surgeon who treats the brow and eyelid as one unit. An ASOPRS-trained oculoplastic surgeon can determine whether a coronal lift, an endoscopic lift, or a combined brow-and-eyelid procedure will give the most natural result for your anatomy.

Heavy brows crowding your eyes?

From the powerful coronal lift to the minimal-incision endoscopic approach, an oculoplastic surgeon can match the technique to your anatomy. Find a specialist near you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who should not have a coronal brow lift?
Patients with a high hairline (the incision can raise it further) or male-pattern baldness (the scar would not stay hidden). For a normal or low hairline, the endoscopic brow lift usually achieves the goal with smaller incisions.
How much lift does a coronal brow lift give?
Roughly 1–2 cm of brow elevation — the most powerful and predictable of any brow technique — while also allowing direct access to the corrugator and procerus muscles that create frown lines.
What is the main downside?
A longer, ear-to-ear incision and a risk of scalp numbness behind the incision, which may be temporary or, less often, permanent.

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