The popularity of breast enlargement surgery is in sharp decline as women turn in favour of more 'natural' and subtle cosmetic procedures, new figures reveal.
The latest audit from the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons (BAAPS) shows that 26,840 cosmetic procedures were carried out in the UK in 2025 - a two per cent decrease on the previous year.
Despite this fall, overall numbers remain significantly higher than pre-pandemic levels.
While breast augmentation remains the UK's most popular operation, surgeons say demand is now clearly shifting away from body-enhancing surgery towards facial procedures that create a more 'refreshed' appearance.
Breast enlargement is not routinely available on the NHS and typically costs between £3,500 and £8,000.
Facelifts, eyelid surgery and brow lifts are all on the rise, while breast implant removals are also increasing.
Breast reduction surgery is now almost level with enlargements, with experts pointing to a growing preference for comfort, practicality and more natural proportions.
Nose jobs - known medically as rhinoplasty - were once among the most popular procedures, but have fallen by 18 per cent.
BAAPS president Nora Nugent said the trend reflects a broader cultural shift away from exaggerated silhouettes.
'We are seeing a broader shift towards a more natural silhouette, one that better complements active lifestyles and the continued rise of athleisure fashion,' she said.
Facial procedures are proving the biggest winner, with eyelid surgery and face and neck lifts both climbing, while brow lifts are among the fastest risers as patients opt for subtle rejuvenation rather than dramatic transformations.
Surgeons say the shift reflects a broader move towards 'maintenance' procedures rather than transformative surgery.
Doctors say women are still responsible for the vast majority of cosmetic procedures, but their motivations are changing fast, with more choosing restorative treatments over augmentation.
Former BAAPS president Rajiv Grover said social media and celebrity influence have helped normalise more natural-looking surgical results, while concerns over repeated non-surgical treatments and so-called 'Ozempic face' are also pushing patients towards longer-lasting solutions.
Among men, cosmetic surgery has fallen overall, but facial procedures are increasingly dominant.
Eyelid surgery has now overtaken rhinoplasty as the most popular male operation, with surgeons noting a shift away from dramatic reshaping towards subtle refinement.
BAAPS vice president Anthony MacQuillan warned that while non-surgical treatments can be effective, they are not always suitable for older patients and may lead to unwanted effects, urging caution over unregulated injectables.