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Plastic Surgery

V-Line Surgery in Korea: Real 2026 Costs & Safety Guide

9 min read · Updated 2026년 6월 18일
Photo: Zulfugar Karimov / Unsplash

V-line surgery is one of the most-searched cosmetic procedures foreigners come to Korea for, and it's also one of the most misunderstood. People picture a quick "jaw slimming" treatment, but the real thing is bone surgery: a surgeon cuts and removes part of your jaw to taper the lower face into a softer V shape. This guide lays out what it actually involves, honest 2026 prices, the risks worth taking seriously, and how to tell a safe clinic from a risky one. None of this is medical advice; it's a starting point for asking better questions.

Quick answer: what V-line surgery is and roughly what it costs in 2026

Here's the short version. V-line surgery (often called facial contouring or 윤곽수술 in Korean) reshapes the lower face into a narrower, more tapered "V" by surgically reducing the jaw bone, usually the jaw angle and the chin. It's done under general anesthesia, it's real orthopedic-style bone surgery, and it is not the same as a Botox jaw slim or a filler tweak.

For 2026, expect a typical all-in price in Korea somewhere in the ₩4,000,000 to ₩12,000,000 range (roughly US$2,900 to US$8,700) depending on exactly what's done and where. A simple chin reduction sits at the low end; a full angle-plus-chin V-line with extra steps lands higher. Plan to stay in the country for two to three weeks, and know that the final, settled result takes months, not days. The rest of this guide unpacks all of that honestly.

Woman's face illuminated by a beam of light in darkness.
Photo by Alina Degli on Unsplash

What "V-line" actually means (and how it differs from a Botox jaw slim)

The phrase "V-line" describes a goal, not a single operation. The aim is a face that tapers from the cheekbones down to a narrow, defined chin, the shape that reads as a "V" from the front. Getting there usually means changing the bone, and that's the part marketing tends to gloss over.

A true surgical V-line typically combines two or three things: jaw angle reduction (shaving or cutting away the flared corner of the mandible near the ear), chin surgery / genioplasty (cutting the chin bone to narrow or reposition it), and often a cortical osteotomy, where the surgeon also removes the outer layer of bone along the jaw body so the whole lower face looks slimmer in profile, not just from the front. Done together, these reshape the actual skeleton.

Now compare that to the non-surgical route. Masseter Botox relaxes the chewing muscle so a square, muscular jaw looks softer over a few weeks; it wears off in about three to six months and touches no bone. Chin or jaw fillers add volume to sharpen the chin line, also temporary. These are low-risk, no-downtime treatments, but they can't remove bone. If your wide jaw is mostly muscle, Botox might genuinely be enough. If it's bone, no injection will change that, and that's the honest dividing line between the two worlds.

광고

Surgical options, what they target, and when you don't need surgery

Surgeons mix and match a few core procedures depending on your anatomy. It helps to know what each one actually addresses:

  • Mandible (jaw) angle reduction. Targets a square, flared jaw at the back corners. The surgeon cuts or shaves the angle of the mandible to soften the corner. This is the classic step for people whose lower face looks wide near the ears.
  • T-osteotomy chin (sliding genioplasty / chin reduction). A "T"-shaped cut lets the surgeon narrow a wide chin, shorten a long one, or reposition it. This is what sharpens the point of the V. It's often the single biggest contributor to the front-view shape.
  • Cortical osteotomy / long-curved ostectomy. Removing the outer cortical bone along the jaw body so the slimming continues smoothly from angle to chin, avoiding a stepped or unnatural edge. Many "true" V-line results depend on this continuity.
  • Two-jaw surgery (orthognathic surgery). A note, not a recommendation: this is a much bigger operation that moves the upper and lower jaws to correct bite and severe asymmetry or protrusion. It's sometimes marketed alongside V-line, but it's functional jaw surgery with a longer, harder recovery. If a clinic suggests it, get a second opinion and understand it's a different league of surgery.

And the honest part: plenty of people don't need any of this. If your concern is a slightly square look from a strong masseter, Botox is cheaper, reversible, and carries a fraction of the risk. If you want a touch more chin projection, filler may do it. Surgery makes sense when the issue is genuinely the bone and you want a permanent change, and you've accepted the recovery and risk that come with it. A good surgeon will sometimes tell you that you're not a candidate. Listen when they do.

Real 2026 cost ranges in Korea

Prices vary a lot, because "V-line" can mean one procedure or several stacked together. The ranges below are typical 2026 estimates for Seoul, converted at roughly ₩1,380 to US$1 (mid-2026). Treat them as ballpark figures and get a written, itemized quote at consultation.

  • Chin surgery / genioplasty alone: roughly ₩3,000,000–₩6,000,000 (about US$2,200–$4,300).
  • Jaw angle reduction alone: roughly ₩4,000,000–₩8,000,000 (about US$2,900–$5,800).
  • Full V-line (angle reduction + chin, often with cortical osteotomy): roughly ₩7,000,000–₩12,000,000+ (about US$5,100–$8,700+).
  • Two-jaw surgery (if needed for bite/asymmetry): substantially more, commonly ₩15,000,000–₩25,000,000+. This is a separate, larger operation.

Why the high numbers? Because this is major bone surgery. The price reflects general anesthesia with a dedicated anesthesiologist, an operating theatre, surgical staff, the surgeon's training, post-op care, and the equipment used to cut and fixate bone. A V-line quote that comes in far below everyone else's should worry you, not excite you. Rock-bottom pricing in this category is often propped up by high volume, junior or substitute operators, or skimping on anesthesia staffing, exactly the places where bone surgery goes wrong.

One 2026 budgeting note: the foreign-patient VAT refund on cosmetic surgery was abolished on January 1, 2026. If a clinic or broker still dangles a "tax refund" on your surgery as a reason to book, the information is out of date. Budget for the full price, VAT included, and ask for the all-in total in writing.

Every clinic we list is government-registered to treat foreign patients — and we take zero commission.

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The serious part: this is real bone surgery under general anesthesia

Read this section slowly, because it's the one that matters most. V-line surgery is not a "lunchtime" procedure. The surgeon makes incisions inside your mouth, cuts living jaw bone, removes pieces of it, and works millimeters away from major nerves, all while you're under general anesthesia. The upside can be real. So are the risks, and you deserve to know them before you sign anything.

  • Nerve injury and numbness. The inferior alveolar and mental nerves run right through the surgical field. Temporary numbness in the lower lip, chin, and gums is common for weeks to months afterward. In a smaller number of cases it's permanent. This is the single most-discussed risk of jaw contouring, and any honest surgeon will raise it with you directly.
  • Asymmetry and over- or under-correction. Bone is cut by hand. If the two sides aren't reduced evenly, or too much or too little is removed, the result can look uneven or unnatural, and fixing it means revision surgery.
  • Prolonged swelling and bruising. Significant facial swelling lasts weeks, and the deep tissues keep settling for months. The face you see at two weeks is not your final result.
  • Bleeding, infection, and bony irregularities. As with any bone surgery, there's a risk of bleeding, infection along the incision, or a palpable step or edge in the bone that may need correction.
  • Anesthesia complications. General anesthesia carries its own risks. In Korea, anesthesia-related events are a leading cause of the rare-but-real cosmetic-surgery deaths, which is exactly why who is managing your anesthesia matters so much.

The two non-negotiables that lower these risks: a dedicated, qualified anesthesiologist present for the entire operation (not a nurse, not the surgeon dividing attention, not someone shared across parallel rooms), and an accredited facility equipped to monitor you and respond to an emergency. Ask both questions out loud in your consultation, and watch how clearly they're answered. None of this is meant to scare you off, the large majority of these surgeries go fine. It's meant to make you choose carefully.

Recovery and how long to stay in Korea

This is where foreign patients most often underestimate the commitment. Plan to be in Korea for two to three weeks minimum after V-line surgery, and budget mentally for a final result that arrives over months.

Here's a realistic timeline:

  • Days 1–7: the rough part. Heavy swelling and bruising peak around days 3–5, your jaw feels tight and stiff, and you'll likely have a compression garment and a drain or dressing early on. You eat liquids and very soft food only, porridge (juk), soups, yogurt, no chewing.
  • Around days 7–14: stitches (usually intra-oral) come out around day 7–14, and your surgeon checks that you're healing cleanly. The biggest swelling starts to ease, though your face is still puffy. This is typically the earliest point a surgeon will discuss clearing you to fly.
  • Weeks 3–6: swelling continues to go down noticeably, and you can gradually move toward softer-then-normal foods as your surgeon allows. You start to look like yourself again.
  • Months 2–6+: the deep, residual swelling resolves slowly and the bone fully settles. The refined V-line you actually keep emerges over this stretch. Patience is part of the procedure.

Flying home: because this is long general-anesthesia bone surgery, clot (DVT) risk and swelling both argue against an early flight. Most surgeons want you to stay through suture removal and the first healing check before a long-haul flight, which is why two to three weeks is the standard advice, not one. Expect a temporary swelling flare after the flight itself. Get explicit clearance from your surgeon before you book or change a return ticket, and for the bigger planning picture see our guide on how long to stay in Korea after surgery.

광고

How to choose a safe clinic for V-line surgery

For bone surgery, vetting the clinic isn't optional. A few minutes of checking can save you from the worst outcomes. Confirm all of these before you pay a deposit:

  • A board-certified plastic surgeon (성형외과 전문의) performs the operation. In Korea, any licensed physician may legally do cosmetic surgery, so "specialist" alone isn't enough. Ask for the operating surgeon's name and specialist license number in writing, and cross-check it. For jaw contouring specifically, you want someone who does this surgery regularly, not occasionally.
  • The surgeon you consult is the surgeon who operates, not a ghost. "Ghost surgery," where a substitute operates once you're sedated, is a documented problem in high-volume clinics, and bone surgery is exactly where it's most dangerous. Get the operating surgeon's name on the consent form, ask whether they'll be running other operations at the same time, and consider requesting operating-room CCTV recording (your right in Korea since 2023). Our guide on how to avoid ghost surgery in Korea walks through the exact questions to ask.
  • A dedicated anesthesiologist is on site for the whole procedure. Not shared, not improvised. Ask directly and get a clear answer.
  • The clinic is government-registered to treat foreign patients. This is a legal baseline, not a quality ranking, but an unregistered clinic soliciting foreigners is already breaking the law, which tells you how it treats the rest of the rules. Every clinic in the CareRoute Korea directory comes from this official registry.
  • Walk away from pressure and bargain pricing. Same-day-decision discounts, deposit demands before you've met the surgeon, and quotes far below the market are red flags for this category, not deals.

CareRoute Korea takes no commissions and books nothing for you. We list government-registered clinics so you can start your own research on solid ground. The decision, and the questions, are yours, and for bone surgery they're worth asking carefully.

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광고

자주 묻는 질문

Is V-line surgery in Korea actually bone surgery?+

Yes. A true V-line procedure cuts and removes part of the jaw bone, typically the jaw angle and the chin, often with a cortical osteotomy along the jaw body, all under general anesthesia. It's real orthopedic-style bone surgery, not a 'jaw slimming' facial or injection. That's why the recovery is measured in weeks and the final result in months.

How much does V-line surgery cost in Korea in 2026?+

As a rough 2026 guide, chin surgery alone runs about ₩3,000,000–₩6,000,000 (US$2,200–$4,300), jaw angle reduction about ₩4,000,000–₩8,000,000, and a full V-line (angle plus chin, often with cortical osteotomy) about ₩7,000,000–₩12,000,000+ (US$5,100–$8,700+). Prices depend on exactly what's done and the clinic. Get an itemized written quote, and remember the VAT refund on cosmetic surgery ended January 1, 2026, so budget for the full price.

What's the difference between V-line surgery and masseter Botox?+

Masseter Botox relaxes the chewing muscle to soften a square jaw for about three to six months, with no downtime and no change to bone. V-line surgery permanently reshapes the jaw bone itself. If your wide jaw is mostly muscle, Botox may be enough. If it's bone, no injection can change it, and surgery is the only option. They solve different problems.

What are the main risks of V-line jaw surgery?+

The most-discussed risk is nerve injury causing numbness in the lower lip and chin, often temporary (weeks to months) but occasionally permanent. Other risks include asymmetry or over/under-correction needing revision, prolonged swelling, bleeding, infection, bony irregularities, and the general risks of general anesthesia. A dedicated anesthesiologist and an accredited facility meaningfully lower these risks, which is why both are worth confirming before you book.

How long do I need to stay in Korea after V-line surgery?+

Plan for at least two to three weeks. Stitches typically come out around day 7–14, peak swelling eases in the first couple of weeks, and most surgeons won't clear a long-haul flight until after suture removal and an initial healing check, partly because of blood-clot risk after long general-anesthesia surgery. The fully settled result takes several months. Don't book a tight return flight, and get your surgeon's clearance first.

How do I avoid a ghost surgeon doing my V-line operation?+

Get the operating surgeon's full name and specialist license number in writing and on the consent form, confirm they're a board-certified plastic surgeon who does jaw contouring regularly, ask whether they'll be running other operations at the same time, and consider requesting operating-room CCTV recording, which is your right in Korea. Choose a government-registered clinic and avoid anywhere that pressures you to pay before you've met the surgeon.

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