Restore Your Eyebrows — Natural, Full, Surgeon-Led
No gimmicks. No sales agents. Just honest advice from GMC-registered surgeons, precise restoration, and results that look real.
- Surgeon-led procedure
- Real patient transformations
- Transparent pricing
- Permanent results
Because eyebrow transplants use hair follicles taken from the scalp, the transplanted hairs continue to grow in the same way as normal head hair. This means you will need to trim and groom your eyebrows regularly, typically every 2–4 weeks, to maintain the desired shape and length. This is normal, expected, and forms part of the long-term care of transplanted eyebrows. We provide clear guidance on trimming and shaping as part of our aftercare support.
You deserve an option that restores your hair and your confidence — without the compromises
At Surgery Group, your Eyebrow transplant isn’t a “one-size-fits-all” service. Here’s how we do it differently
Personalised planning
Together, we’ll design your hairline for balance and natural harmony.
Surgeon-led care
You’ll deal directly with the surgeon — Dr Ahmad Moussa or one of our experienced specialists, not a sales team.
Total transparency
Each eyebrow transplant is customized: we consider your natural brow shape, skin tone, hair colour, hair texture, and personal style.
Meticulous detail
We use precise, minimally invasive techniques (individual graft placement) to mimic natural hair direction, density & contour.
Long-term results
Clear expectations: immediate results (shape/density visible), some hair shedding, then full, natural growth over time.
Your Eyebrow Procedure: Step by Step
01. Consultation & Planning
We examine your existing eyebrows, donor hair quality, and facial structure. We agree a realistic shape and density, explain what is achievable, and show you expected results.
02. Procedure Day
The procedure is performed under local anaesthetic. Individual follicles are carefully extracted and implanted one by one, with close attention to angle, direction, and placement.
03. Recovery & Aftercare
Expect mild redness or swelling for a few days. It’s normal for many of the transplanted hairs to shed in the first 1–2 weeks. New growth starts over the following months, with final results typically seen within 9–12 months.
04. Maintenance
Because donor hair is taken from the scalp, the transplanted eyebrow hairs will keep growing. To keep your brows looking neat, you’ll need regular trimming and occasional shaping, usually every 2–4 weeks.

Before Eyebrow Transplant

Day of Procedure

Day 4

1 Week

4 Months

10 Months
What You’ll Gain
- Natural-looking, permanent eyebrow restoration using your own hair
- Improved symmetry, shape, and density
- Reduced reliance on makeup, brow pencils, or microblading
- Minimal downtime; most resume normal activity within days.
- Ongoing trimming and grooming is required, as donor hair is taken from the scalp
How Much Does It Cost — No Surprises
Every eyebrow transplant is unique, depending on how many grafts you need and how much restoration is required. To give you realistic estimates:
All pricing includes consultation, procedure, aftercare, and follow-ups.
All pricing includes consultation, procedure, aftercare, and follow-ups.
All pricing includes consultation, procedure, aftercare, and follow-ups.
“Our team is committed to your care, ready to help whenever you need us.”
Frequently Asked Questions
Does the procedure hurt?
Most people describe it as uncomfortable rather than painful. We use local anaesthetic, so the main sensation is the injections at the start. After that, you’ll feel pressure and movement, not sharp pain. Expect mild tenderness for a few days.
How long before I see full results?
Eyebrow transplants take time.
0–2 weeks: scabs + redness settle
2–8 weeks: most transplanted hairs shed (normal)
3–4 months: new growth starts
6–9 months: brows look much more established
9–12 months: final shape and density
What about donor area scarring?
Eyebrow transplants usually use FUE, which leaves tiny dot-like marks rather than a single linear scar. In most people it’s hard to notice once healed, even with short hair. Scarring risk exists with any procedure, but FUE is the least visible option.
Will transplanted hair grow like eyebrow hair?
Not exactly. The hairs are usually taken from the scalp, so they keep some scalp-hair behaviour. That means they can grow longer than natural eyebrow hair.
The good news: once trained and trimmed, they look natural.
The honest bit: you’ll need occasional maintenance.
How do I maintain the brows long term?
You’ll likely need:
Regular trimming (often every 1–3 weeks depending on growth)
Occasional shaping
Training the direction early on (brushing + a light product if needed)
This is normal and expected. We’ll show you how to do it.
How many grafts do I need?
It depends on what you’re fixing:
Small patch / scar area: fewer grafts
Thin brows / reshape: moderate grafts
Full restoration: more grafts
We’ll quote after we’ve seen your brows and agreed the shape. There’s no “one size fits all” number that isn’t nonsense.
Will the results look natural?
They can look extremely natural, but eyebrow work is technical. The key is angle and direction of placement. That’s what makes it look like brows rather than “hair stuck on skin”.
Also: realistic expectations matter. A transplant restores hair. It doesn’t create a perfect Instagram stencil.
Is an eyebrow transplant permanent?
Yes. Transplanted follicles are intended to be permanent. But your natural brow hairs can still change with age, skin conditions, hormones, or over-plucking. The transplant doesn’t stop normal ageing, it restores what’s missing.
Can I still have microblading?
Yes, and plenty of people do both. Some use microblading before surgery, some after, some not at all. If you’ve had microblading, it doesn’t automatically rule you out, but we’ll want to see the area and discuss the plan.
What are the risks?
Common short-term issues:
redness, swelling, scabbing
itching during healing
temporary unevenness while hairs shed and regrow
Less common risks:
infection
poor growth
visible scarring (rare with FUE)
some hairs growing in the “wrong” direction (usually manageable)
We’ll cover aftercare properly because that’s what reduces problems.
When can I get back to normal life?
Most people are back to normal activity within a few days. You’ll need to avoid heavy sweating, swimming, and rubbing the area early on. The brows will look obvious at first because of scabbing and redness. That phase passes.
Speak with the surgeon. See realistic previews. Plan for a transformation — no pressure, no sales pitch, just expert care.