A decade ago, PRP was associated with celebrity 'vampire facials' and tabloid headlines. Today it sits firmly in the toolkit of evidence-based aesthetic medicine — used routinely by dermatologists and aesthetic physicians worldwide for skin rejuvenation, hair restoration, and wound healing. What changed? The clinical evidence accumulated, the technique was refined, and results became more predictable and reproducible.
For European patients visiting Delhi, PRP skin rejuvenation represents one of the most compelling treatments available: biologically intelligent, using your own body's healing proteins, with no foreign substances and no downtime worth speaking of. Here is a complete, clear guide to what PRP actually is and what it can realistically do for your skin.
The Science of PRP: What Are Platelets and Why Do They Matter?
Platelets are tiny cells in your blood whose primary job is to initiate healing. When tissue is damaged, platelets rush to the site and release growth factors — signalling proteins that tell surrounding cells to proliferate, produce collagen, and form new blood vessels. In normal blood, platelets make up a small fraction. PRP (platelet-rich plasma) is simply your own blood with the platelet concentration increased to five to ten times above baseline, achieved by spinning a small blood sample in a centrifuge.
When this concentrated platelet solution is applied to the skin — via micro-needling channels or direct injection — it floods the tissue with growth factors, activating fibroblasts (the cells responsible for collagen production) and triggering a controlled regenerative response. Over the following weeks, this translates to improved skin texture, firmness, hydration, and tone. The effect is cumulative and progressive, not instant.
What Does PRP Actually Treat?
PRP is not a single-problem solution. In skilled hands, it addresses a range of skin concerns:
- Fine lines and early wrinkles — particularly around the eyes and mouth
- Skin texture irregularities — rough, uneven, or dull surface quality
- Under-eye hollows and dark circles — improved through increased vascularity and collagen
- General skin dullness and loss of luminosity
- Early acne scarring — shallow, rolling scars respond particularly well
- Neck and decolletage rejuvenation — often neglected areas that respond well
- Blood draw: A small sample of blood (typically 10–20ml) is taken from your arm — comparable to a standard blood test.
- Centrifuge processing: The blood is placed in a centrifuge for 10–12 minutes. This separates the plasma (rich in platelets) from red blood cells. The resulting PRP is drawn off into a syringe.
- Skin preparation: A topical numbing cream is applied to the face and left for 20 minutes.
- Application: Depending on your skin concerns, the PRP is either applied topically during micro-needling (where fine channels in the skin allow the growth factors to penetrate), injected directly into areas of concern such as under-eye hollows, or both.
- Completion: The skin is cleaned and soothing serums applied. You leave with slightly pink, flushed skin.
- Day 1: Redness and mild warmth — similar to a moderate sunburn. Some patients experience minor swelling, particularly around injected areas.
- Day 2–3: Redness subsides. Skin may feel tight or slightly dry. Most people are comfortable in social settings by day 2.
- Week 2–3: The first signs of improvement become visible — improved skin tone, a subtle glow, and a finer skin texture.
- Week 4–6: Full initial results are visible. Skin appears firmer, more luminous, and better-textured.
- Month 2–3 (after a course): The cumulative collagen response delivers the most significant improvements.
- Patients with active skin infections, cold sores, or open wounds in the treatment area
- Patients with platelet disorders or blood-clotting conditions
- Those taking blood-thinning medications (warfarin, high-dose aspirin) — discuss with your prescribing doctor first
- Patients with very low platelet counts (thrombocytopenia)
- Pregnant or breastfeeding women
- PRP + micro-needling: Enhances the penetration of growth factors and amplifies the collagen response
- PRP + Botox: Addresses different ageing mechanisms — Botox relaxes muscle-driven wrinkles; PRP improves overall skin quality
- PRP + dermal fillers: Fillers restore volume; PRP improves the skin surface overlying it
- PRP + laser resurfacing: The growth factors accelerate healing and enhance results after ablative treatments
PRP does not address deep static wrinkles, significant volume loss, or pigmentation conditions effectively on its own — though it works well alongside treatments that do. Your consultation will clarify whether PRP alone is the right approach, or whether a combination protocol makes more sense.
The Procedure: What Happens in the Clinic
A PRP facial session at one of our Delhi partner clinics takes approximately 60 minutes from start to finish. Here is the sequence:
What to Expect: The Recovery Timeline
Understanding the recovery timeline prevents unrealistic expectations and unnecessary anxiety:
How Many Sessions Do You Need?
For skin rejuvenation, the standard protocol is three sessions, spaced four to six weeks apart. This allows the collagen cascade from each treatment to build upon the previous one. After completing a course, most patients maintain results with a single session every six to twelve months.
Some patients — particularly those with early scarring or who want faster results — opt for four sessions in the initial course. Your practitioner will recommend the appropriate protocol after assessing your skin in the initial consultation.
Who Should NOT Have PRP?
PRP uses your own blood, which means the risk profile is low compared to injectable treatments. However, it is not appropriate for everyone:
Your Incostra pre-treatment consultation will include a health questionnaire to identify any contraindications before you travel.
Combining PRP with Other Treatments
PRP works synergistically with a number of other treatments. Common effective combinations include:
Many of our patients choose to combine treatments during their Delhi visit, which is one of the significant advantages of medical tourism: you can complete a multi-treatment protocol in one trip that would take months and multiple appointments to schedule in Europe.
Cost Comparison: PRP Facial in Delhi vs UK
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London Private Clinic
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Delhi (Incostra Partner)
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Single PRP session
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£500 – £800
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£120 – £180
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Course of 3 sessions
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£1,400 – £2,200
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£320 – £500
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PRP + micro-needling combo
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£700 – £1,100
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£160 – £250
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Annual maintenance session
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£500 – £800
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£120 – £180
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A full three-session course in Delhi — including flights and five nights accommodation — typically costs less than a single session in a London private clinic. The practitioners performing the procedure hold equivalent qualifications, and the clinical environments are JCI and NABH accredited to international standards.
PRP in 2026: Where the Evidence Stands
PRP is not a fringe treatment. It is supported by a substantial body of peer-reviewed clinical research. Studies consistently show statistically significant improvements in skin texture, fine lines, and overall rejuvenation scores after a course of PRP micro-needling. It is one of the few aesthetic treatments with both a credible scientific mechanism and reproducible clinical results — which is why it has transitioned from celebrity trend to mainstream clinical practice.
At Incostra, we are transparent about what treatments can and cannot do. PRP will not eliminate deep wrinkles or replace surgical correction where significant ageing has occurred. But for patients who want to improve their skin quality, restore a degree of radiance, and take a genuinely biological approach to anti-ageing, it is one of the most intelligent tools available in 2026.