MEDfacials Blog - Laser Treatment for Broken Capillaries

If persistent redness is the first thing you notice in the mirror, laser treatment for broken capillaries can be a very effective way to calm the skin without changing the rest of your face. For many people, these fine visible vessels sit around the nose, cheeks or chin and can make skin look flushed, uneven or more reactive than it really is.

Broken capillaries are extremely common. Despite the name, they are not always truly “broken” in the dramatic sense. They are tiny superficial blood vessels that have become enlarged and visible through the skin. Some appear as fine red threads, while others look more like a general blush that never quite fades.

For some, this is largely genetic. For others, sun exposure, rosacea, temperature extremes, hormonal shifts, alcohol, ageing or repeated skin irritation all play a part. Whatever the cause, skincare can only do so much once these vessels are established. That is where medical laser treatment can make a real difference.

What laser treatment for broken capillaries actually does

Laser treatment works by targeting haemoglobin inside the unwanted vessel. The light energy is absorbed by the blood, which heats the vessel wall so that the body can gradually break it down and clear it away. The surrounding skin is left largely untouched, which is why the treatment can be so precise.

This is very different from trying to treat redness with exfoliants, serums or camouflage alone. Good skincare can support the skin barrier and reduce triggers, but it cannot remove visible vessels once they are there. A well-chosen vascular laser can.

That said, not all redness is the same. Some patients have a few isolated capillaries around the nostrils. Others have more widespread flushing linked to rosacea or sun damage. The treatment plan depends on what is actually causing the redness, how diffuse it is, and how the skin behaves day to day.

Who is a good candidate?

In general, laser treatment is best suited to people with visible facial thread veins, persistent redness or small superficial vessels that do not settle on their own. The nose and cheeks are particularly common areas, although the chin can also be treated.

A proper consultation matters because suitability is not just about what the skin looks like at first glance. Skin tone, medical history, medications, recent sun exposure, active inflammation and underlying skin conditions all affect whether treatment is appropriate and how it should be carried out.

This is one reason medically supervised treatment tends to feel very different from a standard beauty setting. If your redness is linked with rosacea, sensitivity or recurring flare-ups, it helps to have a plan that considers the bigger picture rather than simply firing a device at the problem.

What happens during treatment?

The appointment itself is usually straightforward. After the skin is assessed and cleansed, protective eyewear is used and the laser is applied in short pulses over the treatment area. Some vessels may be traced individually, while more general redness may be treated using broader passes.

Most people describe the sensation as a quick flicking or snapping feeling, with warmth in the skin. It is uncomfortable rather than painful for most, and treatment is usually well tolerated without the need for anything invasive. Cooling measures can help keep the skin comfortable during the session.

The length of the appointment depends on the size of the area being treated. A small patch around the nose may be quite quick. More diffuse redness across the cheeks naturally takes longer.

What you can expect afterwards

Straight after treatment, the skin often looks pinker and feels warm, rather like mild sun exposure. Some vessels darken briefly before fading. There can also be slight swelling, particularly around delicate areas such as the nose or upper cheeks, but this usually settles within a few days.

Most people are able to return to normal activities quickly, although the skin should be treated gently. Hot baths, saunas, strenuous exercise and anything that significantly increases facial heat are best avoided for a short period afterwards. Sun protection is essential.

Results are not always instant, and this is where expectations need to be realistic. Some small capillaries respond very quickly. More stubborn vessels, diffuse redness or rosacea-related changes often need a course of treatments. Improvement tends to build gradually as the body clears the treated vessels.

How many sessions will you need?

This depends on the type and extent of redness. A few isolated broken capillaries may improve in one session, but many patients need a course for the best result. If the redness is widespread or linked to an ongoing tendency to flush, maintenance treatment may also be sensible over time.

This is not a sign that the treatment has failed. It simply reflects the fact that skin is living tissue, and the causes of redness do not always disappear just because one visible vessel has been treated. Sun exposure, rosacea and natural ageing can all lead to new vessels forming in future.

A good consultation should be honest about that. The aim is meaningful, visible improvement and a calmer-looking complexion, not false promises of permanent perfection.

Laser treatment for broken capillaries and rosacea

One of the most common questions is whether laser can help rosacea. The answer is often yes, but with nuance. Laser can be excellent for the visible vessels and background redness that often come with rosacea. It does not cure the condition itself.

If your skin also reacts strongly to heat, stress, spicy foods or certain skincare products, those triggers still need managing. In some cases, combining laser with a gentle skincare routine and medical advice on rosacea management gives the best overall outcome.

This is where a bespoke approach matters. Treating rosacea-prone skin too aggressively can leave it feeling more unsettled rather than less. The right settings, timing and aftercare make a real difference.

Are there risks?

Any medical aesthetic treatment carries some level of risk, even when it is low. With vascular laser, the most common short-term effects are redness, swelling and temporary sensitivity. Occasionally, bruising can occur, especially in more delicate areas or where vessels are larger.

Less commonly, there can be pigment changes, blistering or prolonged irritation, which is why practitioner experience and proper patient selection matter so much. This is not a treatment to bargain-hunt for. The quality of the consultation, the technology being used and the medical oversight behind the service all count.

For patients with darker skin tones, recent tanning or certain medications, extra caution may be needed. A reputable clinic will tell you if treatment should be adjusted, postponed or avoided altogether.

How to get the best results

Treatment works best when paired with sensible skin habits. Daily SPF is one of the most important, because UV exposure contributes to ongoing vascular damage and recurrence. Gentle skincare also helps, especially if your skin is prone to sensitivity or flushing.

It is also worth paying attention to your personal triggers. Alcohol, very hot environments, spicy foods and harsh active products will not create every visible capillary on their own, but they can aggravate redness and make the skin harder to settle after treatment.

If you are not sure what is triggering your skin, that is useful information in itself. A calm, medically led consultation can help separate general sensitivity, rosacea, sun damage and true vascular change, so treatment is based on what your skin actually needs.

Is it worth it?

For the right patient, yes. Broken capillaries can be surprisingly difficult to cover and often make skin look more inflamed or tired than it feels. Laser offers a targeted way to reduce that redness without changing your features or making you look “done”.

That tends to be why patients value it. The result is not a different face. It is simply skin that looks clearer, calmer and more even, so you still look like you – just less red.

If visible capillaries have been bothering you for a while, the next step is not guessing from photos online or layering on another corrective serum. It is having the skin properly assessed, understanding what type of redness you have, and choosing treatment with safety and subtlety at the centre. Done well, it can be one of the most quietly transformative treatments in aesthetic medicine.

Written By: Dr Joachim Stolte

June 2, 2026

What Our Customers Say

EXCELLENT
Based on 450+ reviews