Breast Lift / Mastopexy

Lift the shape, keep it natural.

A breast lift, or mastopexy, is a surgery that changes the shape and position of the breasts when they have sagged over time. A lot of patients say they feel the same way: the breast volume is still there, but it sits lower, looks less supported in bras, and the nipple position doesn’t match the breast mound anymore. A lift fixes that by changing the shape of the breast tissue and tightening the skin around it.

This makes the breast sit higher and have a cleaner, younger shape. Dr. Kevin Haddad wants the result to look elegant and real on your body. The breast shouldn’t be tight, fake, or too “high.” It should look lifted and well-shaped.

What a lift actually corrects

A mastopexy is more than just a way to tighten skin. It is a procedure to change the shape of something. The breast is reshaped to make it look better by changing the shape of the lower pole and moving the nipple and areola to a more flattering position.

This is why a lift can look so good even if the total volume hasn’t changed. The tissue is in the right place, not lower on the chest, so the breast looks fuller and firmer.

Signs that a lift may be the right solution

Breast descent can happen after pregnancy, breastfeeding, weight fluctuations, or simply with time and skin stretch. Some patients notice it gradually, and others notice it suddenly after a change in body weight or hormones.

A lift is often considered when the nipple sits low relative to the breast fold, when the upper breast looks deflated, or when the breast feels wider and less defined in clothing. If your main concern is position and shape rather than only size, mastopexy is usually the most direct solution.

The lift pattern is chosen to fit your anatomy

There is no single “best” incision pattern for every breast lift. The design is chosen based on how much skin needs to be tightened, how much the nipple needs to be repositioned, and what shape you want at the end.

Dr. Kevin Haddad selects the approach that provides reliable shaping while keeping scars as discreet as possible for your situation. The main priority is control, because the better the control during reshaping, the more stable and natural the result tends to be once healing is complete.

How the breast is reshaped during surgery

A good lift isn’t just about taking off skin; it’s also about building support. During mastopexy, the breast tissue is reshaped into a more compact, supported shape, and the skin is redraped to fit the new shape. The nipple and areola are moved so that they naturally sit on the breast mound, making the front and side look balanced.

This is also where symmetry gets better. Mastopexy helps make breasts look more even in bras and swimsuits by reducing the natural differences between them. It doesn’t try to make them look perfect in the mirror.

What happens to size and cleavage

A lot of people want to know if a breast lift makes their breasts smaller. A lift mostly changes the shape and position, not the volume. Some patients, on the other hand, feel that their breasts look a little smaller or more compact in some bras because they are tightened and reshaped.

Some people think they look fuller, especially in the upper breast, because the tissue is moved up. If you want to see a big change in size, you should talk about it directly, because the plan might involve combining mastopexy with another procedure instead of just relying on the lift.

When a lift is combined with implants or fat transfer

Some patients want a breast lift that gives them more fullness in the upper part of the breast than a lift alone can give them. Some people want a little more volume, but they want a softer, more natural look. In these cases, a lift can be done along with augmentation, which can be done with implants or, in some cases, fat transfer.

The most important thing is balance. Combining procedures can work very well, but the plan must take into account the quality of the skin and long-term support. Dr. Kevin Haddad carefully plans combinations so that the breast shape looks refined and stays stable, rather than heavy or stretched as the tissues settle.

Suitability and planning priorities

When your goals are clear and realistic, and the plan fits the way your skin and breasts behave instead of forcing a trend, a breast lift is usually the best choice.

  • Your breasts have dropped, and you want a higher, more supported shape.
  • The nipple position feels low, or the areola looks stretched.
  • You want to look better in bras and fitted clothes without looking fake.
  • You know that scars are a normal part of mastopexy, even if they heal quickly.
  • You would rather have a structural fix than a series of short-term fixes.

A good consultation will help you figure out if you need just a lift, a lift with volume, or something else. That clarity is what keeps your result safe.

Scars and how they usually settle

Scars are a normal part of mastopexy, and the surgery plan includes how to deal with them. The goal is to make cuts where they can shape the body well and where scars can heal without being too obvious. Scars that happen early on are usually more noticeable, but they get softer and fade over time.

The quality of a scar depends on the type of skin, genetics, and how you take care of it afterward. From a surgical point of view, the most important things are a low-tension closure and a shape that doesn’t depend on stretched skin to keep the result. Scars tend to settle down better when the structure is supported properly.

Recovery and how the shape evolves

Most patients feel comfortable returning to daily routines in stages, but the breasts continue to settle for weeks as swelling reduces and tissues relax.

Early phase

Swelling and tightness are normal, and the breasts may sit higher at first

Weeks that follow

The contour softens, the lower breast shape becomes more natural, and symmetry usually improves

Later

Scars mature gradually and the breast shape stabilises into its long-term position

A steady recovery and proper support garments help the breasts settle smoothly and protect the shaping work during the early healing period.

Sensation, breastfeeding, and long-term changes

After a lift, the feeling in the nipples may change. For a lot of patients, feeling is still there, but it can change for a short time while healing, and some patients have changes that last longer. The ability to breastfeed may also be impacted, contingent upon anatomical considerations and the surgical technique necessary for a secure, stable elevation.

Also, it’s important to remember that a lift doesn’t stop life from going on. Over time, pregnancy, weight changes, and getting older can all affect the breasts. The goal is to reshape the breasts so that they still age naturally.