Understanding breast augmentation candidacy
Deciding whether breast augmentation is right for you isn’t about checking a single box. It’s critical to consider your anatomy, goals, and lifestyle together. Some patients are looking for a noticeable increase in volume, while others want subtle refinement, improved symmetry, or a more lifted shape.
The right approach can also vary. Implants, fat transfer, hybrid techniques, or combining augmentation with a lift each serve different purposes, and not every option is suited to every patient. What works well for one person may not deliver the same result for another. Candidacy also includes practical considerations, like timing, overall health, and how your body may change over time. The sections below break down the key options and factors to help you better understand what may be the right fit for you.
In this article:
- Breast augmentation procedures: A breakdown of implants, fat transfer, hybrid techniques, and when each approach may be recommended.
- Breast lift: What it is and when to consider it: How lifting differs from augmentation, and when combining both may be the right solution.
- Healthy foundations to consider before committing: Key factors like stable weight, development, and expectations that support better outcomes.
- Health and safety considerations: What your surgeon evaluates to ensure you’re a safe candidate and how to plan around risk factors.
- Breast augmentation consultation checklist: What to bring, what to think about, and how to prepare for a productive consultation.
- Explore the breast augmentation before and after gallery: Real patient results to help you visualize outcomes and clarify your preferences.
A more complete look at your options
This page focuses on candidacy. If you’d like a deeper look at procedures, outcomes, and how each approach compares, explore the full breast augmentation guide.
Breast augmentation procedures
There is no one-size-fits-all approach to breast augmentation. The best plan depends on your anatomy, your desired change in volume and shape, and whether you also need lifting to improve position. During consultation, Dr. Plant will assess your measurements, tissue characteristics, and goals to recommend the safest, most proportional option.
Breast implant augmentation
Breast implant augmentation adds volume and can refine breast shape, symmetry, and fullness. Candidates are often looking for a clear change in size, improved upper fullness, or a more balanced silhouette. Implant selection is guided by chest width, tissue coverage, and your preferred look, so the result fits your frame and lifestyle.
→ Explore the Procedure: Breast Implant Augmentation
Fat transfer augmentation
Fat transfer augmentation uses your own fat to create a softer, more subtle enhancement. It may be a fit if you want a modest increase in volume, prefer to avoid implants, and have enough donor fat available. Because not all transferred fat survives long-term, results can vary, and some patients may benefit from more than one session.
→ Explore the Procedure: Fat Transfer Augmentation
Hybrid breast augmentation
Hybrid breast augmentation combines implants with fat transfer. The implant provides structure and volume, while fat can help soften edges, smooth contour transitions, and fine-tune shape. This approach can be helpful for patients who want a tailored result or who would benefit from additional soft tissue coverage.
→ Explore the Procedure: Hybrid Breast Augmentation
Breast augmentation with breast lift
Breast augmentation with breast lift combines volume (augmentation) with repositioning (lift). If your breasts have lost volume and also sit lower on the chest, implants alone may not achieve the lifted shape you want. A combined plan can restore fullness while elevating the breast and nipple position for a more refreshed contour.
→ Explore the Procedure: Breast Augmentation with Breast Lift Combined
Breast lift: What it is and when to consider it
A breast lift (mastopexy) reshapes the breast and elevates the nipple and breast tissue to a higher position. It is designed to address droop and stretched skin. Augmentation adds volume. Some patients need one, others benefit from both, and the decision is based on anatomy, skin quality, and goals.
Signs breast lift should be part of the plan
A lift may be recommended when you have one or more of the following:
- Nipples that sit at or below the breast crease, or point downward
- Noticeable droop (ptosis) with a lower, longer breast shape
- Stretched skin and a deflated look after pregnancy, breastfeeding, weight loss, or aging
- A desire for perkier position, not just more volume
A lift can improve position and shape. Implants can add size and fullness. The right plan depends on what is driving your concern.
How breast lift goals differ from augmentation goals
Augmentation goals typically focus on size, fullness, and proportion. Lift goals focus on position, nipple height, and reshaping the breast envelope. If you want breasts to sit higher and look more elevated, a lift addresses that directly. If you mainly want more volume, implants or fat transfer may be enough. Your consultation is where these goals get translated into a realistic surgical plan.
Healthy foundations to consider before committing
Candidacy is about more than wanting a change. The best candidates tend to have a stable baseline, clear goals, and an understanding of what surgery can and cannot do. These factors help support safety, healing, and long-term satisfaction.
Stable weight and overall health
Being in good overall health and close to your stable, maintainable weight can support smoother healing and more predictable long-term shape. Significant weight changes after surgery can affect breast size and skin stretch over time. If weight loss, pregnancy, or major lifestyle shifts are on the horizon, it may be worth discussing timing during your consultation.
Fully developed breasts
Breast augmentation is typically best considered once breast development is complete. If you are still noticing changes in breast size or shape, your surgeon may recommend waiting so your results are planned around a stable anatomy.
Realistic goals and expectations
Breast augmentation can improve volume, shape, and symmetry, but it cannot create a perfect, identical match between breasts, or stop natural changes from aging, gravity, or future pregnancies. A strong candidate understands that results vary, scars are part of surgery, and implants are medical devices that may require monitoring and future decisions. Your consultation should leave you clear on what is realistic for your body.
Health and safety considerations
A consultation is not just about aesthetics. It is also a safety screening. Dr. Plant will review your medical history and help you plan around factors that can increase risk or affect healing.
Medical history review and medications
Expect a detailed review of your health history, prior surgeries, allergies, and any breast history. You should also share a complete list of medications, vitamins, and supplements. Some products can increase bleeding risk or interact with anesthesia. Your surgical team will provide clear instructions on what to stop, when to stop, and what is safe to continue.
Smoking and nicotine planning
Nicotine (including vaping, gum, and patches) can reduce blood flow and increase the risk of wound healing problems and complications. If you use nicotine, discuss it early. Your surgeon will outline a cessation plan and timeframes to help reduce risk before and after surgery.
Pregnancy and breastfeeding timing
If you are pregnant, trying to conceive, or currently breastfeeding, timing matters. Pregnancy and breastfeeding can significantly change breast volume, skin stretch, and long-term shape. In many cases, it is better to plan surgery when your breast size and lifestyle demands are more stable. Bring your ideal timeline to your consultation so you can talk through options.
Breast augmentation consultation checklist
- Your medical history, prior surgeries, and any relevant breast history
- A complete medication and supplement list
- Inspiration photos that reflect your preferred look
- Your top priorities / goals
Questions to ask
- Which option fits my goals best: implants, fat transfer, hybrid, or augmentation with lift?
- What implant size range and profile suit my chest measurements?
- Do I need a lift to reach my goals, or will augmentation alone be enough?
- What are the main risks and how do we reduce them?
- What does recovery typically look like for my specific plan?
- What long-term monitoring or future planning should I understand?
Prepare for your consultation with confidence
Want to make the most of your consultation with Dr. Plant? Download our plastic surgery consultation guide to help you organize your goals, understand your options, and come prepared with the right questions.


