A smaller areola is not simply “taking a ring of skin.” It is a balance problem between shape, pigment edge, and scar mechanics.
The plan depends on baseline diameter, skin quality, asymmetry, and the nipple position on the breast mound. What looks “too large” is not always the same in every anatomy.
The goal is controlled refinement. Reduction should remain proportionate to breast base width and projection, without forcing an artificial, stamped-on look.
If you are considering areola reduction, an in-person evaluation is the safest way to define what is achievable in your anatomy.
