
- Dermatology Times, March 2026 (Vol. 47. No. 03)
- Volume 47
- Issue 03
"Backyard Botox" Emerges as Latest Harmful Social Media Trend
Key Takeaways
- Improper neuromodulator placement and dosing can cause ptosis, frozen expression, facial asymmetry, infection, scarring, nerve injury, and rarely dysphagia or respiratory compromise.
- Counterfeit or illegally imported injectables introduce unknown ingredients, variable potency, and potential nonsterility, elevating risk for foreign body reactions, true botulism, and unpredictable paralysis.
The rise of at-home injectable trends is exposing patients to risks including infection, nerve damage, and potential systemic complications.
As demand for injectables continues to surge, a troubling underground trend is gaining traction. As reported by FOX 13 Tampa Bay, the latest TikTok trend dubbed “backyard Botox” shows users “mapping out their faces, loading syringes, and injecting what they claim are Botox or Botox-like neurotoxins”—often labeling the process as beginner-friendly or pitching it as a money-saving aesthetic hack.1
NewBeauty spoke with clinicians about the realities behind backyard Botox, the risks that come with DIY neuromodulator injections, and why this trend is raising major red flags among medical professionals.
Why the Risks Go Beyond Bad Results
What the at-home trend actually delivers, experts say, is a serious risk to both appearance and health. When neuromodulators are administered improperly, the consequences can range from disappointing to dangerous. Facial asymmetry, drooping eyelids, and frozen expressions are among the most common outcomes, but infections, scarring, and nerve damage are also possible. In rare but serious cases, incorrectly placed or dosed injections can even interfere with swallowing or breathing.
Where Backyard Botox Breaks Every Safety Rule
Compounding the risk is the prevalence of counterfeit or illegally imported injectables in the underground market, which may contain unknown ingredients or incorrect concentrations.
“DIY Botox isn’t clever—it’s risky,” said George Sanders, MD, a plastic surgeon based in Los Angeles, California. “More bruising, wrong placement, and bad results that don’t fade overnight. Penny-wise? Maybe. Dollar-foolish? Absolutely.”
Jody A. Levine, MD, dermatologist and director of dermatology at Plastic Surgery and Dermatology of NYC in New York, is also succinct in her warning: “It is the beginning of the end of health care when people normalize using unregulated medications and computer assistance to become their own health care providers,” she said. “This is unsafe on so many fronts—not only for the individual who is practicing the trend but also for the standard it sets. Next, people will try to treat their own blood pressure or try surgical procedures on a friend [from] a YouTube video. This is not smart, and it is very dangerous.”
So-called “safe injections” come with a few nonnegotiables: Legitimate neuromodulators must be FDA approved, sourced directly from authorized manufacturers, and administered by trained providers in regulated medical settings. None of those safeguards exist with backyard Botox—and that’s where the risks multiply.
“One big problem with this trend is if you are self-injecting, you can very easily hit an artery, which can lead to neurological issues,” said Robert Singer, MD, a plastic surgeon at Prime Plastic Surgery in La Jolla, California. “Plus, the material you get online has no consistency when it comes to concentration or dosage. It most likely isn’t even Botox. It’s just a bad idea all around.”
Why Viral Trends Don’t Belong in Medical Aesthetics
Karan Lal, DO, MS, a dual fellowship–trained pediatric and cosmetic dermatologist at Affiliated Dermatology in Scottsdale, Arizona, added another at-home perpetrator to the mix. “Backyard Botox and peptides injections alike are becoming popular,” he said, placing the blame on an unexpected source. “I think we, as an industry, are at fault, to some degree, as we post ourselves as injectors injecting ourselves. This makes it look very easy, almost cookie-cutter, which it is not.”
The reality of it all, Lal said, is that neuromodulator injections require a thorough understanding of facial anatomy and depth of injection. “There is just no way these online toxins are real, FDA-approved neuromodulators. They are most likely actual toxins with properties we are unaware of. Besides the material, are they sterile in their production? There are a lot of things to consider here.”
The Bottom Line
Proper consultations, sterile technique, precise dosing, and a deep understanding of facial anatomy are not optional steps—they are essential measures designed to protect patient safety and outcomes. “Backyard Botox is a recipe for a number of potential issues: infection, foreign body reactions, true botulism, and muscle paralysis and asymmetry,” Lal said.
Although the promise of convenience and cost savings may be tempting, experts agree that the potential consequences far outweigh any short-term benefit. “If you cannot afford Botox, please don’t assume it’s something you can do yourself,” he said. “Instead, focus on good skin care, sun protection, and proven topicals like argireline, which also relaxes muscles in the skin and softens wrinkles.”
NewBeauty is an MJH Life Sciences brand and a sister publication to Dermatology Times.
Reference
Curtis G. ‘Backyard botox’: doctors warn against latest TikTok trend. Fox13 Tampa Bay. January 16, 2026. Accessed February 18, 2026.
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