Pricing is the highest-leverage variable in a medspa's financial model. A 10% price increase on a service with 75% margin has more impact on net profit than adding two new service days. And yet most practices arrive at their prices through a process that amounts to: look up what competitors charge, charge slightly less, and hope the volume makes it work.
That approach has two problems. First, you don't know your competitors' costs — you're matching their revenue number without knowing whether it produces a margin worth working for. Second, pricing below your actual cost of delivering a service doesn't produce customers who value your work; it produces customers who will leave for the next place that charges less.
This guide covers how to build prices from the ground up, what the Phoenix metro market actually looks like by service category in 2025, and the specific mistakes that cause practices to leave money on the table without realizing it.
Start With the Math, Not the Market
Before you look at what anyone else charges, you need to know your own numbers. The market sets a ceiling — the maximum a patient in your market will pay for a given service. Your costs set a floor — the minimum you can charge before the service costs you money to deliver. Your actual price should live between those two points, as close to the ceiling as your positioning supports.
The starting point is always your direct cost of goods (COGS) — the cost of the materials actually consumed delivering one unit of a service. This is not your total cost of operating the practice. It's just the materials cost for one treatment.
COGS: 20 units × $0.90/unit (typical wholesale, 100-unit vial) = $18. Needles, prep, gloves = $3. Total COGS: $21. Time cost: 30 min appointment × $1.00/min (RN at $60/hr effective) = $30. Overhead allocation: 0.5 hrs × $40/hr overhead rate = $20. Floor price: $71. At 80% target margin: $71 ÷ 0.20 = $355. Phoenix metro market for 20-unit Botox: $240–$360. Your math says $355; the market ceiling supports it. Price at $350 and you're at ~80% product margin and well above floor. At $195 (matching a Groupon competitor): you made $124 over COGS but absorbed no overhead, no real labor cost, and produced nothing toward practice sustainability.
Phoenix Metro Price Benchmarks — 2025
These are working market ranges for the Phoenix metro area based on what well-run independent practices — not national chains, not Groupon-dependent volume shops — are successfully charging in 2025. "Successfully" means at sustainable margin, with patients who return.
National chain pricing is not listed because it's not a useful benchmark for your practice. Chains operate at volume and margin levels that are structurally unavailable to independent providers. Matching their prices is a race you cannot win.
| Service | Unit / Structure | Phoenix Metro Range | Typical Margin |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neuromodulator (Botox/Dysport) | Per unit | $12–$18/unitExperienced injectors at or above midpoint | 80–90% |
| Neuromodulator — area-based | Per area | $175–$350/area3-area treatment: $350–$650 | 80–88% |
| HA Dermal Filler (1 syringe) | Per syringe | $650–$950/syringeLips typically $650–$750; nasolabial $700–$850 | 62–75% |
| Lip Augmentation | Per treatment | $600–$800Includes 0.5–1 syringe; touch-up policy matters | 60–72% |
| IV Therapy — Standard Drip | Per infusion | $120–$250Hydration at low end; immune/recovery at high end | 70–82% |
| NAD+ Infusion | Per infusion | $300–$750Dose-dependent; 500mg typically $400–$500 | 75–85% |
| Ozone (MAH) | Per session | $175–$325Package pricing increases utilization | 78–86% |
| O-Shot | Per treatment | $900–$1,500All-inclusive (PRP draw, nerve block, injection) | 80–88% |
| P-Shot | Per treatment | $1,000–$1,800Higher when bundled with GAINSWave | 80–88% |
| PRP Facial / Vampire Facial | Per treatment | $400–$750With microneedling at high end | 78–86% |
| Semaglutide / GLP-1 Program | Monthly | $250–$450/monthIncludes medication, monitoring, lab review | 55–70% |
| Testosterone Optimization (TRT) | Monthly | $150–$350/monthSelf-injection programs at low end; injected at practice at high end | 60–72% |
Price as a Positioning Signal
Pricing communicates something about your practice before a patient ever walks in the door. In aesthetic medicine — which is an elective, appearance-driven, trust-dependent purchase — pricing anchors patient expectations about clinical quality. This doesn't mean the most expensive practice wins. It means that prices significantly below market create a specific signal that patients read whether you intend it or not.
The positioning map below describes the four quadrants available to independent medspa owners. Only one of them produces a sustainable, profitable independent practice.
Low price, no distinguishing expertise. Competes on convenience and deals. High volume required to cover costs. Patient loyalty is price-dependent — they leave when someone cheaper opens nearby. Cannot hire or retain strong clinical staff at this margin.
Priced at or above market midpoint. Differentiates on clinical credentials, provider continuity, and specialty services. Patients choose the practice for expertise, not price. Margin supports staff quality, continuing education, and real marketing investment.
Strong clinical credentials but prices below their value. Common in early practice — providers undercharge because they feel they haven't "earned" higher prices yet. Produces unsustainable workload and price-sensitive patients who resist future increases.
Premium pricing without clinical depth to support it. Works briefly, collapses on reviews and word-of-mouth. Patients who paid premium prices and didn't get premium outcomes are vocal about it.
The independent practice sweet spot
Independent medspa owners who price at or above the market midpoint and clearly communicate their clinical differentiation — board certification, years of experience, specific specialties, live-patient training credentials, active medical directorship — consistently outperform lower-priced competitors on both margin and patient retention. Your price signals whether you believe in your own expertise. Price below your value and you make that decision for the patient before they can make it themselves.
Package and Bundle Design
Packages serve two purposes: they improve patient compliance (patients who pre-pay for a series complete it; patients who pay per visit often don't) and they improve your cash flow (revenue collected before service delivery). Designed correctly, packages also improve margin — if the per-treatment discount is smaller than the reduction in administrative cost of billing and scheduling individual visits.
A few principles that hold up in practice:
- Bundle complementary services, not identical ones. A "Botox + filler" package is more compelling than "buy 3 Botox sessions get one free" because the combination addresses something the patient actually wants (a full-face refresh) rather than just offering a discount on repetition.
- Limit discounts to 10–15%. Package discounts above 15% eat margin faster than the compliance benefit recovers. A 20% discount on a 75% margin service drops you to 60% margin — a meaningful degradation for a modest convenience improvement.
- Attach packages to outcomes, not sessions. "4-session IV wellness program: foundational immune and energy support" is a stronger offer than "4 IV drips for $X" because it positions the package as a clinical protocol, not a volume deal.
- Set clear expiration dates. Packages that don't expire create scheduling inventory problems and reduce urgency. 6–12 month expiration is standard; shorter for seasonal or time-sensitive services.
- Price packages by session, not total. "$395/session when purchased as a 3-session package" anchors patients to the per-session price (which feels like a comparison to the standard rate), not the total outlay (which can trigger sticker shock).
6 Pricing Mistakes That Kill Margin
The most common pricing error: providers set prices based on what they think sounds reasonable or what they've seen charged elsewhere, without ever calculating what the service actually costs to deliver. They have no idea whether their current prices produce margin. Some of their services are profitable; others are not; they can't tell which are which. Running the COGS calculation in Section 1 for every service you offer takes a few hours and is the highest-ROI activity you can do for your practice finances this quarter.
Introductory pricing and new-patient discounts attract patients whose primary decision criterion is price. Those patients do not become loyal patients — they become Groupon patients, moving from practice to practice in pursuit of the next deal. If you want to acquire patients who return, invest in content, referrals, and clinical reputation — not in temporarily lowering prices. The practices that grew their patient bases most effectively did it through Google reviews and clinical expertise, not introductory offers.
Product costs increase. Lab supply costs increase. Rent and utilities increase. A practice that hasn't raised prices in two years has seen its margins compressed by inflation without a corresponding revenue increase. Annual price reviews are a business necessity, not an optional exercise. A 5–8% annual increase on service prices is reasonable and typically below patient detection thresholds if communicated as part of a practice quality message rather than announced as a price hike.
O-Shot, P-Shot, NAD+ therapy, and hormone optimization are not commodity services — they require specialized training, clinical oversight, and provider expertise that not every practice has. Providers who have invested in training these services sometimes price them at the same margin calculation they'd apply to a standard IV drip or a basic facial. Specialty services with high clinical barriers to entry support premium pricing. If you've done the training, have the medical director oversight, and have the outcomes to show for it — price like the specialist you are.
Provider-initiated discounts at the point of service — shaving $50 off because a patient seems hesitant, offering a "friend rate," adding a free add-on that wasn't part of the conversation — are margin destruction events that also train patients to negotiate. Once a patient learns that hesitating produces a price reduction, hesitating becomes part of every booking conversation. If your pricing is right, stand by it. If you want to offer a loyalty benefit, build it into a formal structure (a membership, a referral program) rather than improvising it in the treatment room.
This is the most consequential mistake. Prices that produce a 40% net margin require a practice operating at a certain volume, staffing level, and pace to be sustainable. If your current prices require you to see 10 patients a day, six days a week, to hit your income goals — your prices are wrong, not your schedule. Pricing should support the practice you want to operate, not force you to operate a practice you don't. Build the prices first; then build the patient volume to support them.
When and How to Raise Prices
Price increases in established practices are often anxiety-producing for providers who fear patient attrition. The data from practices that have done systematic price reviews consistently tells the same story: patient attrition from a well-communicated, reasonable price increase is smaller than providers expect, and the patients who leave are disproportionately the ones with the lowest lifetime value anyway.
A few practical principles for price review cycles:
- Review annually, at minimum. Build a price review into your year-end practice planning. Calculate what your product costs increased, what your overhead increased, and whether your current prices still produce your target margin.
- Lead with the service, not the price. "We've upgraded our protocol for [service] to include [specific improvement]" is a stronger communication vehicle for a price increase than "prices have increased." If your protocols have been improved, your training updated, or your products upgraded — say so.
- Give notice for existing patients. 30–60 days' notice of a price change for established patients is both respectful and an effective retention tool — it creates a window for existing patients to book at the current price, generating near-term revenue before the change takes effect.
- Increase new-patient pricing first. When building confidence in a price increase, consider implementing the new pricing only for new patient bookings for the first 90 days. This tests market response before applying the change to your established patient base.
This guide covers how to set prices. The question of which services are worth adding to your menu based on their margin profile — and what revenue leaks to fix before adding new services — is covered in our Medspa Revenue Optimization guide. Both are worth working through before a Revenue Optimization Audit engagement, since the audit covers both pricing and service mix.
Frequently Asked Questions
Independent medspa owners who price confidently, communicate their clinical differentiation clearly, and resist the pressure to compete on discount build better practices than those who don't — not because of some abstract positioning principle, but because the margin exists to hire better staff, invest in better training, and deliver better outcomes. Price is both the result of your cost structure and the input to your practice quality. Get the math right, position honestly, and charge what your expertise is worth.