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Best Anti-Aging Clinics in Miami, FL: A 2026 Guide

A 2026 guide to anti-aging skincare and cosmetic dermatology in Miami, Florida: leading academic medical centers, treatments commonly available, typical pricing, and how to choose a board-certified provider.

D
Dr. Sarah Chen, MD
12 min read

Choosing where to go for anti-aging skincare in Miami is less about finding "the most famous clinic" and more about finding a board-certified physician you can trust over years, in a setting that fits your climate, your skin, and your budget. What shapes anti-aging care in Miami is tropical climate with year-round UV and very high humidity, anchoring one of the largest cosmetic and aesthetic dermatology markets in the United States. This guide walks through the major academic medical centers and health systems in the area, what treatments are most commonly requested locally, what 2026 pricing actually looks like, and — most importantly — how to verify that whoever holds a laser or a syringe near your face is genuinely qualified to do so.

How We Built This Guide (and What It Is Not)

This guide is intentionally conservative. We do not list private practices we cannot verify, and we do not "rank" individual physicians, because clinic ownership, lead physicians, and pricing change faster than any list can keep up with — and on a medical site, naming the wrong person as "best" causes real harm.

Instead, we anchor this guide on public academic medical centers and major health systems in Miami that operate dermatology departments. These are institutions whose dermatology programs are listed publicly on their own websites, are staffed by board-certified physicians, and offer both medical and cosmetic dermatology under one roof. Your final choice should still be made on the AAD's official "Find a Dermatologist" tool at aad.org/public/find-a-derm and by verifying any physician's certification on the American Board of Medical Specialties site at certificationmatters.org.

Major Academic Medical Centers and Health Systems in Miami

Each of the institutions below operates a publicly listed dermatology department or division, with both medical (skin cancer screening, eczema, psoriasis, acne, hair loss) and cosmetic (Botox, fillers, laser resurfacing, chemical peels, microneedling) services. These should be your starting points if you want academic-level care or a credentialed physician-led practice rather than a walk-in med spa.

  • University of Miami Health System (Dr. Phillip Frost Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Surgery)
  • Jackson Health System
  • Cleveland Clinic Florida (nearby in Weston)
  • Baptist Health South Florida

These institutions also run residency and fellowship programs, which means the dermatologists practicing there are typically continuing to teach and publish. That does not automatically make them "the best" for your specific skin — but it does mean their training is verifiable and their accountability is high.

For private dermatology and plastic surgery practices in Miami that are not listed above, the right move is the same one we'd recommend in any city: confirm board certification yourself before you book, ideally in dermatology (American Board of Dermatology) or plastic surgery (American Board of Plastic Surgery), and look for a physician who personally performs the procedure you're considering.

Notable Private Practices in Miami

Beyond the major academic medical centers and health systems above, Miami has a number of independently recognized private dermatology practices. Each of the practices listed below is led by a board-certified physician whose credentials and third-party recognition can be verified through public sources (Castle Connolly Top Doctors, New York Magazine / D Magazine "Top Doctors" or "Best Doctors", Super Doctors, AAD fellowship, and academic faculty appointments). We list them alphabetically by practice name; we do not rank them against each other, because ranking individual physicians at this scale is not editorially defensible — and the "best" provider depends entirely on which procedure you need, your skin type, and the chemistry of the consultation.

  • Barba Dermatology — Dr. Alicia Barba, MD. Board-certified dermatologist, Harvard Medical School graduate, FAAD. Focus: cosmetic dermatology, injectables, laser, founder of Barba Dermatology and Barba Skin Clinic. Practice site: barbadermatology.com.
  • Biscayne Dermatology — Dr. Devorah Shagalov, MD. Double board-certified dermatologist; fellowship-trained Mohs micrographic surgeon. Focus: Mohs surgery, minimally-invasive cosmetic procedures, neuromodulators, laser, soft-tissue augmentation. Practice site: biscaynedermatology.com.
  • Miami Dermatology & Laser Institute — Dr. Jill Waibel, MD. Board-certified dermatologist; Subsection Chief of Dermatology at Baptist Hospital; FAAD. Focus: cutaneous laser surgery and resurfacing, scar revision, photoaging — practice operates an unusually large laser/light device inventory. Practice site: miamidermlaser.com.
  • Miami Dermatology & Mohs Surgery — Dr. Miesha Merati, DO, FAAD. Board-certified dermatologist; fellowship-trained in non-invasive skin cancer detection. Focus: anti-aging, laser surgery for photoaging, dermoscopy, clinical-trial research. Practice site: miamiderms.com.
  • Miami Skin and Vein — Dr. Shaun Patel, MD. Harvard-trained aesthetic physician; national trainer for aesthetic injectables. Focus: injectables, energy-based facial rejuvenation, vein and aesthetic medicine. Practice site: miamiskinandvein.com.

These are starting points for research, not endorsements. Before booking with any private practice in Miami:

  1. Verify the lead physician's board certification at certificationmatters.org and aad.org/public/find-a-derm.
  2. Confirm the physician (not just the practice) personally performs the specific procedure you are considering.
  3. Search your state medical board for any disciplinary history.
  4. Ask in your consultation about complication management and after-hours coverage.

Why Local Climate Matters for Anti-Aging in Miami

In a humid subtropical city like Miami, year-round UV combines with high ambient humidity. Two patterns dominate: first, melasma and post-inflammatory pigmentation that can be aggravated by both sun and heat; and second, oilier-feeling skin where heavy creams cause clogged pores or breakouts. The right anti-aging plan here is usually lighter in texture (gel moisturizers, fluid sunscreens) but more aggressive about pigment control, which often means prescription topicals from a board-certified dermatologist plus targeted treatments such as IPL, picosecond laser, or carefully selected chemical peels. Because melasma can worsen with the wrong laser, this is one of the most important climates in which to choose a provider with specific experience in skin of color and pigment disorders.

Most Commonly Requested Anti-Aging Treatments in Miami

Across the dermatology and aesthetic market in Miami, the procedures patients ask about most are broadly the same as in other US metros, with relative emphasis shifting based on climate and demographics:

  • Neuromodulators (Botox, Dysport, Xeomin, Daxxify) for dynamic wrinkles in the forehead, between the brows, and around the eyes. Performed by physicians or by trained, supervised injectors. Effects last roughly three to four months on average.
  • Hyaluronic acid dermal fillers (Juvéderm, Restylane, RHA, Belotero) for volume loss in the cheeks, tear troughs, lips, and lower face. Filler is a medical procedure with real risks, and choice of injector matters far more than the brand of product.
  • Chemical peels ranging from light glycolic and salicylic acid peels to medium-depth TCA peels, often used in series for tone, texture, and pigment.
  • Microneedling and microneedling with radiofrequency for collagen stimulation, fine lines, pores, and acne scarring.
  • Lasers and energy-based devices including IPL/BBL for pigment and redness, non-ablative fractional lasers for texture and early wrinkles, picosecond lasers for pigment, and ablative CO2 or erbium resurfacing for more advanced photoaging.
  • Prescription topical care such as tretinoin, tazarotene, hydroquinone (under supervision), tranexamic acid for melasma, and barrier-focused medical-grade moisturizers.

For most patients, a long-term anti-aging plan in Miami is not one big treatment — it is a combination of consistent prescription skincare, daily SPF, and occasional in-office procedures spaced across years. A board-certified dermatologist is in the best position to design that plan because they can also rule out medical issues (skin cancer, rosacea, melasma, autoimmune skin disease) that affect what's safe.

Typical Pricing in Miami

Miami sits in a premium pricing market for cosmetic dermatology. Real quotes vary by provider, neighborhood, device, and amount of product used, but the rough ranges below match what most credentialed practices in this market charge in 2026:

  • Initial consultation: $150 to $400, sometimes credited toward treatment
  • Botox / Dysport / Xeomin: $15 to $25 per unit
  • Hyaluronic acid filler: $900 to $1,800 per syringe
  • Microneedling: $500 to $900 per session
  • Chemical peels: $200 to $600 per superficial peel; $1,000–$2,500 per medium peel
  • Laser resurfacing: $900 to $2,500 per non-ablative session; $3,000–$6,000 for full-field ablative

Premium markets often charge at the top of national ranges, especially when treatments are physician-performed at academic medical centers or in concierge-style cosmetic dermatology practices. Be cautious of dramatically discounted "Groupon" pricing for injectables and lasers — these procedures depend heavily on injector skill and device calibration, and the cheapest quote in any city is rarely the safest one.

How to Choose a Provider in Miami

The most useful filter is not Yelp stars or Instagram following — it is board certification. For anti-aging care, that almost always means one of:

  1. Board-certified dermatologist (American Board of Dermatology). Verify at certificationmatters.org and aad.org/public/find-a-derm.
  2. Board-certified plastic surgeon (American Board of Plastic Surgery), particularly for surgical procedures, deep resurfacing, and advanced facial rejuvenation. Verify at abplasticsurgery.org.
  3. Board-certified facial plastic surgeon (American Board of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery) for procedures focused on the face.

When you call a clinic in Miami, useful questions include:

  • "Is the procedure performed by a board-certified physician, or by a nurse, PA, or aesthetician under physician supervision?"
  • "How many of these procedures has the physician performed in the last year?"
  • "What is the plan if I have a complication — bruising, an infection, a vascular event with filler — and who do I call after hours?"
  • "What is included in the quoted price (consultation, follow-up, touch-up)?"

A credentialed practice will answer all of these without hesitation. A practice that resists or deflects is telling you something important.

Red Flags to Watch For

  • "Group buy" or flash-sale pricing on injectables, lasers, or "stem cell" facials
  • Injectors who cannot tell you their training, certification, or supervising physician
  • Pressure to book multiple sessions or large packages on the first visit
  • Any clinic offering treatments with non-FDA-approved devices or substances
  • Vague or evasive answers about what brand of product is being used and how much
  • No clear plan for managing complications

Climate-Specific Skincare Considerations for Miami

The single biggest mistake we see in this region is underusing sunscreen. In Miami, daily broad-spectrum SPF 30 (or higher) on all sun-exposed skin — face, ears, neck, chest, back of the hands — is foundational, regardless of season or cloud cover. The second most common mistake is adding too many actives at once without medical supervision: people stack retinol, vitamin C, AHAs, BHAs, niacinamide, and exfoliating toners and then wonder why their barrier feels raw. A board-certified dermatologist in Miami can simplify a routine and make the remaining ingredients work harder, often at lower cost than the over-stacked routine.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the single most important anti-aging step I can take in Miami?

Daily broad-spectrum sunscreen, applied generously and reapplied during outdoor exposure. It is the most well-evidenced and lowest-risk anti-aging intervention available, and it is more important than any laser or injectable. In Miami's climate (tropical), this is especially true.

Is a board-certified dermatologist worth the higher price compared to a med spa?

For medical concerns (suspicious moles, persistent acne, melasma, hair loss), almost always yes. For cosmetic procedures, the answer depends on the procedure: lasers, deep peels, and any injectable in or near the eye area, lips, or nose are higher-stakes and worth a credentialed physician. Light maintenance facials and superficial peels can be appropriate at a well-run med spa.

How do I verify if a clinic in Miami is legitimate?

Three steps. First, look up the lead physician on certificationmatters.org and aad.org. Second, search the state medical board for any disciplinary history. Third, ask the clinic directly which board-certified physician supervises the practice and who personally performs the procedure you want.

Are anti-aging treatments in Miami covered by insurance?

Cosmetic treatments — Botox for wrinkles, fillers, cosmetic lasers, cosmetic peels, microneedling for aging — are almost never covered. Medical dermatology (skin cancer screening, biopsies, treatment of psoriasis, eczema, acne, rosacea, autoimmune skin disease) is typically covered by health insurance, including Medicare for eligible patients. The same office and even the same physician may bill some visits as cosmetic and others as medical.

When should I start anti-aging care?

Most board-certified dermatologists recommend daily sunscreen and a consistent gentle skincare routine starting in adolescence or early adulthood, with prescription retinoids and antioxidants commonly added in the late 20s to 30s. In-office treatments like Botox, lasers, microneedling, and chemical peels are usually started when there is a specific concern, not on a fixed timeline. The right starting point in Miami depends on your skin type, your sun exposure, and your goals — a board-certified dermatologist can design that plan.

The Bottom Line

The "best" anti-aging clinic in Miami is the one led by a board-certified dermatologist or plastic surgeon who personally evaluates your skin, explains the trade-offs of each treatment, and is reachable when something goes wrong. The major academic medical centers and health systems listed above are reliable starting points, but a credentialed private practice can be equally good — the verification step is what matters. Use the AAD "Find a Dermatologist" tool at aad.org/public/find-a-derm and the ABMS verification site at certificationmatters.org before you book.

Editorial note: This article is for general education and is not medical advice. Clinic ownership, lead physicians, services offered, and pricing in Miami change over time — verify board certification and current scope of practice directly with any provider before booking. Last reviewed 2026-04-15.

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