Top Skin Tags Providers in London

Best Skin Tags Practitioners in London

Dr Eldimarys Curry Machado

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Dr Eldimarys Curry Machado

Dermatologist

Rating
(153 reviews)
Location
London SW8 2FQ, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Mr Samim Ghorbanian

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Mr Samim Ghorbanian
CQC

BMedSci University Of London

Rating
(574 reviews)
Location
London W1G 9PB, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Jana Torres Grau

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Dr Jana Torres Grau
CQC

BSc (Hons)

Rating
(574 reviews)
Location
London W1G 9PB, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Mr Mohsan Malik

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Mr Mohsan Malik
CQC

BSc (Hons) Biomedical Science

Rating
(574 reviews)
Location
London W1G 9PB, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Mr Georgios Pafitanis

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Mr Georgios Pafitanis
CQC

Consultant

Rating
(574 reviews)
Location
London W1G 9PB, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Mr Lauren

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Mr Lauren

Consultant

Rating
( reviews)
Location
London NW11 9EU, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Betina Moyal

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Betina Moyal

CryoPen-qualified Practitioner For Cosmetic

Rating
(26 reviews)
Location
London N2 9EJ, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Ben Zion Lauren

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Ben Zion Lauren

Director

Rating
(4 reviews)
Location
London EC1N 8BA, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Hila Lauren

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Hila Lauren

Dermatologist

Rating
(4 reviews)
Location
London EC1N 8BA, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Mr Reza Alamouti

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Mr Reza Alamouti
CQC

FRCS (Plast)

Rating
(574 reviews)
Location
London W1G 9PB, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Mr Vincenzo Ottaviano

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Mr Vincenzo Ottaviano
CQC

FRCS (Plast)

Rating
(574 reviews)
Location
London W1G 9PB, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Dr Nicki Bystrzonowski

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Dr Nicki Bystrzonowski
CQC

Registered General Practitioner

Rating
(574 reviews)
Location
London W1G 9PB, United Kingdom
Treatments offered

Skin-tags Treatment in London

Our dataset currently has 276 clinic(s), with approximately 213372 reviews and an average rating of 4.52.

Medical Infrastructure:

    • Multiple tertiary NHS teaching hospitals (e.g., Chelsea & Westminster Hospital, Guy’s and St Thomas’, UCLH)
    • Extensive private hospital network (HCA Healthcare UK, The London Clinic)
    • Internationally recognised dermatology and plastic surgery consultants.

Local Aethetics Market:

    • Highly mature and saturated
    • Internationally competitive.

Goals of Skin-tags Treatment

  • Confirm what the bump really is, because looking at skin can be tricky
  • Remove them if theyre irritating, catching on clothes or jewelry, or just annoying you
  • Do it safely so theres minimal scarring or complications
  • Make sure removal doesnt miss a more serious lesion that looks similar

Skin-tags Treatment Options

Medical & Non-Surgical Approaches

  • Skin tags can be removed with non-surgical methods like freezing (cryotherapy), burning (electrocautery), ligation (tying off), and snipping or laser. Home remedies and over-the-counter kits are out there but professional advice is strongly recommended to avoid infection, bleeding or misdiagnosis. Cryotherapy uses extreme cold to kill the tag and let it fall off; its often quick and non-invasive. ([turn0search28](turn0search28), [turn0search5](turn0search5))

Pros of Skin-tags Treatment

    Cons of Skin-tags Treatment

      Cost of Skin-tags Treatment in London

      • Small clinics might charge around GBP 25 for a tiny tag, or up to GBP 50 for multiple small tags removed together ([turn0search1](turn0search1), [turn0search26](turn0search26))
      • More comprehensive private dermatology clinics often quote around GBP 100 to 500 per tag depending on size and method ([turn0search8](turn0search8), [turn0search12](turn0search12))
      • Specialised clinics can go higher, for example around GBP 395 per tag using certain devices with additional fees for extras ([turn0search4](turn0search4), [turn0search23](turn0search23))
      • Method used (cryotherapy, excision, laser, cautery)
      • Number of tags and complexity
      • Location of the tag (eyelid or genital skin tags can cost more)
      • Clinic reputation, practitioner experience, and whats included (consultation, aftercare)
      • Whether histology or extra testing is needed

      Accessibility

      Public transport:

        • Extensive Underground, rail, and bus connectivity
        • Clinics clustered near major stations (Oxford Circus, Bond Street, South Kensington).

      Parking availability:

        • Limited central parking
        • Strong reliance on public transport and private chauffeur services.

      Clinic distribution:

        Heavy concentration in Central London (Harley Street, Chelsea, Kensington) with secondary clusters in affluent suburbs (Richmond, Hampstead, Canary Wharf).

      Airport proximity:

        Multiple international airports (Heathrow, Gatwick, London City, Stansted, Luton).

      Preparing for Your Skin-tags Appointment

        Treatment Safety & Local Regulations

          There arent specific NICE guidelines just for skin tags because theyre benign and very common, but suspected malignant lesions or uncertain ones get handled under NICE skin cancer guidance. MHRA regulates medical devices used in clinics. General standards for safe practice apply.

          Local regulatory authority:

            • Care Quality Commission (CQC) for England
            • General Medical Council (GMC) for doctors
            • Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) for nurse prescribers.

          Private insurance usage locally:

            • High for medically indicated dermatology and skin cancer treatment (BUPA, AXA, Aviva recognition common)
            • Cosmetic procedures largely self-funded.

          Cosmetic finance availability:

            • Widely available via FCA-regulated finance providers
            • 0% promotional finance common in competitive segments.

          Who Is a Good Candidate?

            Choosing a Clinic

              Current average rating citywide: 4.52

              Recovery & Long-Term Results

                Aftercare:
                • Skin tags can be removed with non-surgical methods like freezing (cryotherapy), burning (electrocautery), ligation (tying off), and snipping or laser. Home remedies and over-the-counter kits are out there but professional advice is strongly recommended to avoid infection, bleeding or misdiagnosis. Cryotherapy uses extreme cold to kill the tag and let it fall off; its often quick and non-invasive. ([turn0search28](turn0search28), [turn0search5](turn0search5))