79% of London cosmetic clinics are rated 4.8 or higher on Google — and 71% sit at 4.9 or above. When nearly every clinic looks near-perfect, the rating tells you almost nothing. We analyzed real pricing, injector credentials, and brand data from London-area clinics — here's what actually matters before you book.
Based on SkinDay's verified pricing data from clinics across London and Southwestern Ontario, Botox in London commonly costs $9–$11 per unit, with an average around $9.90/unit. The London market is notably consistent: the large majority of clinics price right around $10/unit. A common cosmetic treatment of the upper face runs roughly $345–$595, depending on how many units you need.
Most Botox pricing guides are based on estimates or industry surveys. This one is built from real market data — verified pricing from clinics across London and the surrounding region. Here's what the numbers show.
The most striking thing about London isn't the average — it's the consistency. While the Greater Toronto Area spreads its pricing from roughly $7 to $13, London bunches almost entirely at $10. That means less hunting for a deal, but it also means price tells you very little about which clinic is right for you. The differentiation in London is the injector, not the dollar figure.
If pricing barely separates London clinics, you might hope reviews would. They don't. Across London-area clinics with Google ratings:
When 71% of clinics sit at 4.9 stars or above, a high rating isn't a signal — it's the baseline. A 4.9 doesn't tell you a clinic is exceptional; it tells you it's normal.
Here's the honest answer, and it's the most useful thing this guide can tell you: in London, the data can't pick a winner for you. Price is flat — almost everyone charges around $10/unit. Ratings are saturated — nearly three-quarters of clinics sit at 4.9 stars or higher. And the injector pool is fairly uniform, with registered nurses doing most of the injecting. The three things people usually compare — price, reviews, and credentials — have all converged in this market. No amount of online research is going to surface a clear "best" clinic, because by the numbers, they really are very similar.
That's not a problem to agonize over — it's actually freeing. Our suggestion: pick a clinic that's convenient for you, book a small first treatment of two or three areas, and judge from how it actually feels. Did the injector listen and assess your face, or rush you? Did the result look natural at your two-week mark? Did you feel comfortable? Those are things you can only learn by going, not by reading.
If it's a good fit — congratulations, you've found your clinic, and you can stop looking. If something feels off, don't worry: London has more than a hundred cosmetic clinics, almost all priced and rated similarly, so there's no shortage of other good options to try. The low stakes cut both ways. In a market this uniform, the worst outcome of a first visit isn't an expensive mistake — it's simply trying somewhere else next time.
Most patients want a specific area treated, not "Botox" in the abstract. Since pricing is per unit, the cost of any given area comes down to how many units it typically takes. Below are standard unit ranges for the most common areas, with estimated London cost based on the local average of $9.90/unit. Actual units vary with muscle strength, anatomy, and the result you want, so treat these as planning ranges, not quotes.
| Treatment area | Typical units | Estimated London cost |
|---|---|---|
| Forehead lines | 10–20 units | $100–$200 |
| Frown lines "11s" between brows | 15–25 units | $150–$250 |
| Crow's feet | 10–24 units | $100–$240 |
| Lip flip | 4–8 units | $40–$80 |
| Jawline slimming masseter | 30–60 units | $300–$595 |
| Underarm sweating both sides | 50–100 units | $495–$990 |
Unit ranges reflect standard clinical dosing. Cost estimates use the May 2026 London average of $9.90/unit and are for planning only — your injector determines actual units. The upper-face trio (forehead, frown lines, crow's feet) most people start with typically runs 35–60 units, or roughly $345–$595 in London.
All neurotoxins approved by Health Canada are safe and effective. "Botox" has become a generic term the way "Kleenex" has — but several brands are available in Canada, each with a slightly different formulation and unit conversion.
If brand drove price, you'd expect a big spread here. You don't — once normalized to Botox-equivalent units, the brands land close together in London.
Averages based on verified pricing from London-area clinics, with Dysport normalized to Botox-equivalent units. Some brand samples are small — interpret the smaller ones with caution.
The takeaway is the same one the data shows in every market: brand barely moves the price. From Nuceiva at $10.42 to Xeomin at $9.70 is less than a dollar a unit, and the gap narrows further once you account for small sample sizes. So while it's worth knowing which product you're getting, the brand is the least important factor in what you'll pay. What matters is the injector.
Important note on unit conversion: Dysport units are not equivalent to Botox units — a treatment might use roughly 2.5–3× as many Dysport units. The per-unit price looks different but the total treatment cost is often similar. All prices on SkinDay are normalized to Botox-equivalent units for fair comparison.
In Ontario, Botox must be prescribed by an authorized prescriber and administered by a regulated health professional. In London, the data we have skews heavily toward registered nurses (RNs), who make up the large majority of injectors with published pricing — consistent with Ontario's broader pattern, where RN-led clinics dominate the cosmetic injectables market.
Based on verified pricing from London-area clinics, RN-led clinics average around $10.10/unit. We also see nurse practitioners and physician-led clinics in the market, though in smaller numbers among clinics that publish pricing — too few to draw firm conclusions about a credential premium one way or the other in London specifically. The broader Ontario pattern is that physician-led clinics tend to price at the higher end, but London's published data is too thin to confirm that locally with confidence.
The practical takeaway: in a market where nearly everyone charges around $10, the injector's training and experience matter far more than the price. Ask who is injecting you, their credential, and how many injectable treatments they perform.
Since the real test is the visit itself, here's what to pay attention to while you're there. These are the things that actually separate one London clinic from another — none of which show up in a price or a star rating:
In Ontario, Botox must be prescribed by an authorized prescriber and administered by a regulated health professional. If a clinic is evasive about who is actually injecting you and under what supervision, that's a serious concern regardless of price.
Botox in London averages about $9.90 per unit as of May 2026, based on SkinDay's verified pricing data from London-area clinics. The market clusters tightly at $10 per unit, with most clinics charging between $9 and $11. A typical first treatment of the upper face runs roughly 35–60 units, or about $345–$595.
London is a less price-fragmented market than larger cities like Toronto. The large majority of London-area clinics in SkinDay's data charge right around $10 per unit, so there's less price-shopping to do than in the GTA. Differences come more from the injector and clinic than from price.
Forehead lines typically take 10–20 units, roughly $100–$200 in London at the local average. Treating the frown lines and crow's feet at the same visit brings the total to about 35–60 units, or $345–$595.
They're very close. London averages about $9.90 per unit versus roughly $9.52 in the Greater Toronto Area. London is marginally higher on average, but the practical difference on a typical treatment is small. The bigger difference is that London prices cluster tightly at $10, while the GTA has a wider spread.
The main factors are who's injecting, the clinic's positioning, and the brand used. The product matters less than the injector's experience. A very low per-unit or per-area price can mean fewer units are being used, which may give weaker or shorter-lasting results.
Most people see results last three to four months. First-time patients sometimes find it wears off a little faster; with regular treatment, results often last longer over time. This isn't affected by which brand you choose at a reputable clinic.
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