Many patients describe their concern as “sagging under the butt” or a crease that feels heavier and lower than it used to. This is often an envelope issue. The lower buttock and upper posterior thigh region can develop skin redundancy and a deeper fold due to aging, weight change, or post–weight loss laxity. In that anatomy, adding volume alone does not correct the fold. A lift-based strategy may be required.
A gluteal fold lift is a surgical procedure designed to improve the lower buttock contour by removing a controlled segment of redundant skin and re-draping the tissue to elevate and refine the gluteal crease region. It can be performed as a focused lift or as part of a broader lower body lift depending on the distribution of laxity. The key trade-off is a scar placed in or near the gluteal fold.
The anatomical complexity begins with laxity pattern. Some patients have redundancy primarily at the lower buttock crease. Others have laxity extending into the posterior thigh and lateral hip. A focused fold lift may help the crease but leave thigh laxity unchanged. In those cases, a broader lift plan may be more coherent.
Scar and tension management are central. The crease region experiences compression and movement with sitting and walking. Closure under high tension increases the risk of widened scars, contour distortion, and recurrence of laxity. Individual tissue behavior influences scar maturation and how quickly swelling resolves, but tension is the main controllable factor.
It is also important to clarify what a gluteal fold lift is not. It is not a procedure to create major buttock projection. It is not scar-free. It does not guarantee perfect symmetry. It is not always the right answer when volume deficiency is dominant and skin quality is good; in those cases, fat transfer may be more appropriate.
Recovery variability should be expected. Swelling and tightness are common. Sitting and activity modifications may be recommended. Early contour is not final contour. Scars mature over months.
Revision logic exists. Scar refinement or additional tightening can be considered after full healing, but revisions add scar burden and reduce predictability. This is why initial planning should prioritize stable closure and realistic tightening.
When properly indicated, a gluteal fold lift can improve the lower-buttock contour in a practical way: less fold heaviness, smoother transitions, and more comfortable fit in clothing. The best outcomes come from correct candidacy, conservative excision design, and disciplined scar management.