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Laser and Skin

CO2 Laser Resurfacing Cost: What to Expect in 2026

By Therese Allen, ARNP, Owner 9 min read
Patient consulting about CO2 laser resurfacing pricing at Allen Medical Aesthetics

CO2 laser resurfacing is one of the most effective treatments available for sun damage, acne scarring, deep wrinkles, and uneven skin texture. It is also one of the most significant investments in aesthetic medicine. Understanding the true cost of CO2 laser treatment, what drives pricing differences, and how it compares to alternatives helps you make an informed decision about whether this procedure is the right fit for your goals and budget.

At Allen Medical Aesthetics, we believe in transparent pricing and want patients to understand exactly what they are paying for. This guide breaks down national averages, the factors that influence your individual cost, and how to evaluate whether CO2 laser resurfacing is a worthwhile investment for your skin.

Quick Answer

CO2 laser resurfacing typically costs $1,500 to $5,000 per session in 2026, depending on the treatment area, whether fractional or fully ablative technique is used, and provider expertise. Full-face fractional CO2 treatments generally fall in the $2,500 to $4,500 range, while smaller targeted areas like the perioral (around the mouth) region cost $1,500 to $2,500.

The price of CO2 laser varies widely based on treatment area size, depth of treatment, and geographic location. Most patients need only one session, making the per-treatment cost the total investment for many people.

National Average Cost for CO2 Laser Resurfacing

According to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons and data from aesthetic industry surveys, the average cost of laser skin resurfacing in the United States ranges from $1,200 to $5,000 or more per treatment. CO2 laser resurfacing specifically tends to fall on the higher end of that range because it is the most aggressive and effective resurfacing laser available.

These national averages provide a useful benchmark, but your actual cost will depend on several factors specific to your treatment plan. A small, targeted treatment on a single area costs significantly less than a comprehensive full-face resurfacing session. Geographic location, provider qualifications, and the specific laser system used also influence pricing.

Treatment AreaTypical Price RangeAverage CostSessions Typically Needed
Full Face$2,500 to $5,000$3,5001 to 2
Perioral (Around Mouth)$1,500 to $2,500$1,8001 to 2
Periorbital (Around Eyes)$1,200 to $2,500$1,7001 to 2
Neck$1,500 to $3,000$2,2001 to 2
Chest (Decolletage)$1,500 to $3,500$2,5001 to 2
Hands$1,000 to $2,000$1,5001 to 2
Acne Scar Treatment (Cheeks)$2,000 to $4,000$3,0001 to 3
Important

These prices reflect the professional fee for the laser treatment itself. Some practices charge separately for consultation, numbing, post-care products, or follow-up visits. Always ask what is included in the quoted price before booking.

What Factors Affect the Cost of CO2 Laser Treatment

The wide range in CO2 laser pricing is not arbitrary. Several concrete factors determine where your treatment falls within that range. Understanding these variables helps you compare quotes more accurately and recognize when a lower price might signal a compromise in quality.

Treatment Area and Size

The size of the area being treated is the most straightforward cost factor. A full-face treatment requires more laser passes, more time, and more consumables than a targeted treatment around the mouth or eyes. Combining areas (such as face plus neck or face plus chest) increases the cost but often at a per-area discount compared to treating each area in a separate session.

Depth and Intensity of Treatment

More aggressive treatments cost more because they require higher energy settings, more passes, and greater clinical expertise to perform safely. A light fractional treatment for mild sun damage uses less energy and takes less time than an aggressive treatment for deep acne scarring. The depth of treatment also affects the level of post-procedure monitoring and follow-up required.

Provider Expertise and Credentials

The experience level and credentials of your provider significantly impact both cost and outcomes. Board-certified dermatologists, plastic surgeons, and advanced practice providers (nurse practitioners and physician assistants) with extensive laser training typically charge more than less-experienced operators. This premium reflects their ability to customize treatment settings, manage complications, and deliver consistent results.

Choosing a provider based solely on the lowest price is one of the most common mistakes patients make with CO2 laser treatment. This is an aggressive procedure with real risks, including scarring, infection, and permanent pigmentation changes if performed incorrectly. The skill of the person operating the laser matters more with CO2 resurfacing than with almost any other aesthetic procedure.

Geographic Location

Laser resurfacing costs vary by region. Urban practices in major metropolitan areas like Seattle, Los Angeles, and New York typically charge 20% to 40% more than practices in suburban or rural areas. However, patients should not travel solely for a lower price, as the quality of follow-up care and accessibility in case of complications matters significantly with CO2 laser treatment.

Laser Technology and Platform

The specific laser system used affects cost both directly and indirectly. Newer, more advanced laser platforms cost more for the practice to acquire and maintain, which is reflected in treatment pricing. These systems also tend to deliver more precise treatment with better safety profiles, which translates to better outcomes for patients. At Allen Medical Aesthetics, we use both CO2 fractional and Erbium YAG laser systems, allowing us to customize treatment for each patient.

CO2 fractional laser device in a modern treatment room at Allen Medical Aesthetics
CO2 fractional laser device in a modern treatment room at Allen Medical Aesthetics

Fractional CO2 vs Fully Ablative CO2: How Pricing Differs

The type of CO2 treatment you receive, fractional or fully ablative, also affects cost. These two approaches differ in both technique and outcomes, which is reflected in their pricing.

Fractional CO2 laser delivers energy in a pixelated grid pattern, treating 20% to 40% of the skin surface while leaving healthy tissue intact between treatment zones. This is the standard approach for most cosmetic CO2 treatments today. It produces excellent results with a more manageable recovery period of 7 to 14 days. Full-face fractional CO2 typically costs $2,500 to $4,500.

Fully ablative CO2 laser removes the entire surface layer of skin in the treatment area. It produces the most dramatic single-session results but comes with 2 to 3 weeks of intense recovery and a higher risk of complications. Fully ablative treatment is more technically demanding to perform safely, which is reflected in its higher cost. Full-face fully ablative CO2 treatment typically ranges from $4,000 to $6,000 or more.

Most patients at Allen Medical Aesthetics are excellent candidates for fractional CO2, which offers an outstanding balance of results, recovery, and cost. For patients with deep acne scarring or severe photodamage who want the most aggressive single-session result, fully ablative treatment may be discussed after careful evaluation.

FactorFractional CO2Fully Ablative CO2
Typical Cost (Full Face)$2,500 to $4,500$4,000 to $6,000+
Skin Surface Treated20% to 40%100%
Recovery Time7 to 14 days14 to 21 days
Sessions Needed1 to 21
Improvement Per Session50% to 70%70% to 90%
Complication RiskLowerHigher
Key Takeaway

Fractional CO2 is the most common choice for cosmetic resurfacing because it balances strong results with reasonable downtime and lower risk. If two fractional sessions are needed, the total cost may approach that of a single fully ablative treatment, but with less risk at each session.

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Is CO2 Laser Resurfacing Worth the Investment

At $2,500 to $5,000 per session, CO2 laser resurfacing is not an impulse purchase. But when you evaluate the results it delivers and compare the cost to alternatives that produce lesser results, the value proposition becomes clear for the right candidate.

CO2 laser is the only treatment that can produce 50% to 80% improvement in acne scarring, deep wrinkles, and sun damage in a single session. Patients who have spent years and thousands of dollars on topical products, light chemical peels, and over-the-counter retinoids without achieving the results they want often find that a single CO2 treatment delivers what years of incremental treatments could not.

The longevity of results also factors into the value equation. The collagen remodeling triggered by CO2 laser treatment produces improvements that last 3 to 5 years or longer. When you divide the cost of treatment across years of improved skin quality, the per-year investment is modest compared to ongoing treatments that require monthly or quarterly visits.

That said, CO2 laser is not the right investment for everyone. Patients with mild concerns may get excellent results from less aggressive (and less expensive) treatments like RF microneedling or chemical peels. The best approach is to consult with an experienced provider who can evaluate your specific concerns and recommend the most cost-effective treatment plan.

Therese Allen, ARNP, owner and lead provider at Allen Medical Aesthetics

“I tell patients to think of CO2 laser as a long-term investment in their skin, not a one-time expense. A single treatment can deliver results that last 3 to 5 years, which often makes it more cost-effective than years of less aggressive treatments that never quite get you where you want to be.”

Therese Allen, ARNP Owner and Lead Provider

CO2 Laser Cost vs Alternative Treatments

Comparing the cost of CO2 laser resurfacing to alternative treatments helps put the investment in perspective. Each treatment listed below addresses overlapping concerns (skin texture, scarring, sun damage, wrinkles) but at different intensity levels and price points.

TreatmentCost Per SessionSessions for ResultsTotal InvestmentBest For
CO2 Laser (Fractional)$2,500 to $4,5001 to 2$2,500 to $9,000Deep scars, severe sun damage, dramatic improvement
RF Microneedling$800 to $1,5003 to 4$2,400 to $6,000Mild to moderate texture, fine lines, skin tightening
Chemical Peels (Medium Depth)$300 to $8003 to 6$900 to $4,800Surface pigmentation, mild texture, maintenance
Microneedling$300 to $7003 to 6$900 to $4,200Fine lines, mild scarring, overall skin quality
IPL Photofacial$400 to $8003 to 5$1,200 to $4,000Pigmentation, redness, mild sun damage
Pro Tip

Many patients benefit from a combination approach. A single CO2 laser session to address the primary concern, followed by less expensive maintenance treatments like chemical peels or RF microneedling every 6 to 12 months, can be the most cost-effective long-term strategy.

Infographic breaking down CO2 laser resurfacing cost factors and price ranges by treatment area
Infographic breaking down CO2 laser resurfacing cost factors and price ranges by treatment area

Financing and Payment Options

Because CO2 laser resurfacing is an elective cosmetic procedure, it is not covered by health insurance. However, several financing options can make the investment more accessible.

Many aesthetic practices, including Allen Medical Aesthetics, offer flexible payment plans that allow patients to spread the cost over several months. Third-party medical financing companies like CareCredit and PatientFi provide healthcare-specific credit lines, often with promotional interest-free periods of 6 to 24 months for qualified applicants. These programs allow you to undergo treatment now and pay over time without interest, provided you pay within the promotional period.

Health Savings Accounts (HSAs) and Flexible Spending Accounts (FSAs) generally do not cover cosmetic laser resurfacing. However, if your treatment is medically indicated (for example, treating precancerous actinic keratoses or significant scarring that impairs function), there may be exceptions. Check with your HSA or FSA administrator for specific guidance.

When evaluating the cost, consider the total value rather than just the sticker price. A single CO2 laser treatment that costs $3,500 and produces results lasting 3 to 5 years breaks down to roughly $700 to $1,200 per year. Compare that to the cumulative cost of ongoing treatments, skincare products, and time invested in less effective alternatives.

How to Avoid Overpaying (or Underpaying) for CO2 Laser

Finding the right balance between cost and quality is important with any medical procedure. Prices that are significantly below market rate should raise questions, just as prices far above average deserve explanation.

A quote well below the typical range may indicate that the provider is using older equipment, has less experience with CO2 laser, is not including essential components like numbing or follow-up visits, or is not a qualified medical professional. CO2 laser resurfacing has real risks, and cutting corners on provider quality or equipment can lead to suboptimal results or complications.

On the other hand, the most expensive option is not automatically the best. Higher prices in aesthetic medicine sometimes reflect luxury facility overhead, celebrity endorsements, or prime real estate rather than superior clinical outcomes. The factors that actually matter for your results are the provider's experience with CO2 laser, the quality and maintenance of the laser equipment, a thorough consultation and customized treatment plan, clear post-procedure protocols and accessible follow-up care, and before-and-after photos of actual patients treated by that provider.

  • Ask how many CO2 laser treatments the provider performs per month
  • Request to see before-and-after photos of patients with similar concerns
  • Confirm what is included in the quoted price (numbing, post-care, follow-up)
  • Ask about the specific laser system and when it was last serviced
  • Verify the provider's credentials and training in laser resurfacing
Important

Never choose a CO2 laser provider based on price alone. This is one of the most aggressive treatments in aesthetic medicine, and the skill of your provider directly affects both your safety and your results.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does CO2 laser resurfacing cost on average?

The national average for CO2 laser resurfacing ranges from $1,500 to $5,000 per session. Full-face fractional CO2 typically costs $2,500 to $4,500, while targeted treatment of smaller areas like the perioral or periorbital region ranges from $1,200 to $2,500.

Is CO2 laser resurfacing covered by insurance?

CO2 laser resurfacing is generally considered a cosmetic procedure and is not covered by health insurance. Exceptions may exist for medically indicated treatments, such as removing precancerous lesions or treating scarring that impairs function. Most patients pay out of pocket or use medical financing options.

Why is CO2 laser resurfacing so expensive?

The cost reflects the advanced technology required (CO2 laser systems cost $50,000 to $200,000), the provider expertise needed to operate them safely, consumable supplies, numbing agents, and the level of post-procedure care involved. CO2 laser is the most aggressive resurfacing tool available, producing results that less expensive treatments cannot match.

Is one CO2 laser session enough?

For many patients, a single fractional CO2 session produces excellent results, with 50% to 80% improvement in their primary concern. Patients with severe acne scarring or deep wrinkles may benefit from 2 to 3 sessions spaced 6 to 12 months apart for optimal results.

Are there cheaper alternatives to CO2 laser?

Yes. RF microneedling ($800 to $1,500 per session), chemical peels ($300 to $800), and standard microneedling ($300 to $700) are less expensive per session. However, these treatments are less aggressive and typically require more sessions to achieve comparable results. For mild to moderate concerns, they may be the most cost-effective choice.

Can I finance CO2 laser resurfacing?

Many practices offer financing through third-party providers like CareCredit or PatientFi, which provide promotional interest-free periods of 6 to 24 months. Allen Medical Aesthetics offers flexible payment options to help make treatment accessible.

Is CO2 laser worth it compared to chemical peels?

CO2 laser produces more dramatic results in a single session than chemical peels can achieve over multiple treatments. For deep concerns like acne scarring and significant sun damage, CO2 laser is typically the more effective investment. For milder concerns and ongoing maintenance, chemical peels offer a more affordable option.

This article supports our Co2 Laser Resurfacing service page. Learn more about treatment options, candidacy, and what to expect.

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