Cheek filler is frequently treated as an instant cheekbone shortcut. In real practice, it is a soft‑tissue contour tool, and the margin between refined and heavy is mainly dose and placement.
What makes it more complex than people assume is that “flat cheeks” can mean different anatomy: volume loss, under‑eye shadowing, mild support deficiency, or a midface that is already full. Treating the wrong mechanism with added volume is how faces start to look puffy rather than balanced.
Planning is individualized. I assess tissue thickness, swelling tendency, baseline asymmetry, and how the cheek interacts with the under‑eye and nasolabial zone, then build a conservative, staged plan.
The goal is controlled refinement, not a dramatic template change.
If you want an anatomy-led recommendation, an online consultation is appropriate.
