Top Aesthetic Practitioners in Aberdeen
Best Practitioners in Aberdeen
Lucy Willoughby

Lucy Willoughby
Aesthetic Practitioner
Rating
(32 reviews)
Alexsa

Alexsa
Aesthetics Practitioner
Rating
(12 reviews)
Treatments offered
Mya

Mya

Aesthetics Practitioner
Rating
(221 reviews)
Marinela Dema

Marinela Dema
Qualified Beauty And Aesthetics
Rating
(47 reviews)
Elaine Wood

Elaine Wood

Registered General Nurse (RGN)
Rating
(221 reviews)
Jenna

Jenna

Aesthetics Practitioner
Rating
(221 reviews)
Dr Emma Victoria Wray

Dr Emma Victoria Wray
Dermatologist
Rating
(9 reviews)
Treatments offered
Dr Frank Muller

Dr Frank Muller
Dermatologist
Rating
(9 reviews)
Treatments offered
Dr Sanjaykumar M Rajpara

Dr Sanjaykumar M Rajpara

Dermatologist
Rating
(47 reviews)
Treatments offered
Jade Hammond

Jade Hammond
Aesthetics Practitioner
Rating
(167 reviews)
Dr Gemma Harrop

Dr Gemma Harrop
MBChB (medical Degree)
Rating
(9 reviews)
Treatments offered
Dr Cher Han Tan

Dr Cher Han Tan
MBChB
Rating
(9 reviews)
Treatments offered
Top Treatments in Aberdeen
Top Cities in the UK
About Aberdeen
Population:
- Approx. 198,000–200,000 (Aberdeen City council area estimate)
- Wider travel-to-work area significantly larger
Lifestyle Characteristics:
- Professional workforce (energy, engineering, academia, healthcare)
- Significant student population (University of Aberdeen, Robert Gordon University)
- Strong private healthcare usage culture relative to other Scottish cities
Medical Infrastructure:
- Major tertiary teaching hospital campus at Foresterhill (Aberdeen Royal Infirmary)
- NHS Grampian headquarters
- University of Aberdeen medical school
- Established private clinics and specialist dermatology services
Market Size
Number of Clinics:
18Total Reviews:
998Average Citywide Rating:
4.541176471- Advanced and diversified
- Includes tertiary dermatology, injectables, lasers, hair restoration and spa services
Treatments
Post Surgical CareMelasma TreatmentFacial TreatmentsAcneDermatology TreatmentsSkin LesionsSkin BoosterChemical PeelVerruca TreatmentAnti Wrinkle TreatmentNailsAesthetic Skin ConsultationRosacea TreatmentFungal Nail TreatmentLymphatic DrainagePigmentation TreatmentIpl TreatmentHair TreatmentsMassageSkin Texture And TighteningContact DermatitisVitamin TherapyEczema TreatmentPatch TestingPlatelet Rich PlasmaTattoo RemovalAlopeciaLaser TreatmentsBirthmarksFillersBotoxLipsPolynucleotide TreatmentProfhiloMarionettesScarringMicro-needlingCheek EnhancementSkin CancerInflammatory Skin ConditionsRash TreatmentMelanoma TreatmentMohs SurgeryHives TreatmentBasal Cell CarcinomaKeloid RemovalMicroneedlingBody ContouringHifuDermapen Treatment
Regulatory & Compliance Environment
Primary Regulator:
- Healthcare Improvement Scotland (HIS) for independent healthcare services
- General Medical Council (GMC) for doctors
- Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) for nurse prescribers
Prescribing Requirements:
- Botulinum toxin and other prescription-only medicines require face-to-face consultation with qualified prescriber under Scottish regulatory guidance
- Remote prescribing restrictions apply
Inspection Framework:
- Independent clinics providing regulated treatments (laser/IPL, surgical dermatology) must register with and are inspected by Healthcare Improvement Scotland
- NHS services operate under NHS Scotland governance frameworks
Insurance & Financing
Private Insurance Usage:
- Moderate-to-high for medical dermatology and skin cancer services
- Low for purely cosmetic injectables
Cosmetic Finance Availability:
- Present in larger clinics
- Some providers offer staged payment or third-party finance options
Seasonality & Local Trends
Peak Booking Periods:
November–December (pre-Christmas aesthetic peak)March–June (pre-summer treatments)January (new year appearance goals)Social Media Trends:
Before-and-after injectables imageryEducational dermatologist-led skin cancer awareness postsHair transplant transformation journeysDevice-led treatment demonstrations (HIFU, IPL, Dermalux)Referral Networks & Teaching Hospital Links
Direct integration with University of Aberdeen medical school and Aberdeen Royal Infirmary teaching hospital campus
Accessibility & Location Factors
Public Transport Proximity:
- Comprehensive urban bus network
- Aberdeen railway station with national connections
- Clinics clustered near city centre and West End
Parking Availability:
- City-centre parking available but limited at peak times
- Suburban clinics benefit from easier access
City Centre vs Suburban Distribution:
Medical Tourism Potential
Tourism Volume Indicator:
- Regional hub for North East Scotland
- Inbound patients from Highlands and islands for specialist dermatology and hair transplantation
Hotel Density Near Clinics:
Airport Proximity:
- Aberdeen International Airport within 20–30 minutes of city centre
- Strong UK and limited international connectivity













