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Will a Lipoma Removal Leave a Scar?
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The honest answer is yes — any procedure that involves making an incision in the skin a scar of some kind. The realistic question is not whether there will be a scar but how visible the scar will be once healing is complete. For most patients, a properly performed lipoma leaves a fine pale line that fades to barely visible over 6 to 12 months. The factors that determine how the scar looks come down to surgical technique, the location of the lipoma, the patient’s skin type, and how the scar is managed during healing.
This guide covers what to expect from the scar after , what the surgeon does during the procedure to minimise it, and how patients can support the best possible outcome during the months after surgery.
Why some scar is unavoidable
A lipoma is a fat tumour sitting beneath the skin within a fibrous capsule. To remove it completely, the surgeon needs to:
The incision is what the scar. Liposuction-based techniques produce scars but predictably leave the capsule behind, which means substantially higher recurrence rates. For most seeking removal, an open excision with a visible scar is the right trade-off. For full discussion of after techniques, see
How big is the scar?
The length is approximately the diameter of the lipoma. A 2cm lipoma needs roughly a 2cm to deliver it intact; a 5cm lipoma needs roughly a 5cm incision. The scar is therefore proportionate to what was removed.
Some surgeons attempt very small incisions and try to squeeze the lipoma out through them. This produces a smaller scar but at the cost of incomplete capsule removal and higher recurrence rates. The Centre for Surgery approach is to use an incision for complete intact removal and to focus on the quality of the wound closure rather than the size of the opening.
What surgical technique does to minimise the scar
Skin is under constant tension from underlying muscles and tissues, and this tension follows predictable patterns called skin tension lines or Langer’s lines. Incisions placed parallel to these lines heal with the least tension and produce the finest scars; incisions placed across them produce wider, more visible scars.
For a lipoma on the upper back or shoulder — both high-tension areas — the incision is planned to follow the local pattern. On the neck, the incision can often be hidden along a skin crease. On the or thigh, it runs lengthways with the limb. Planning is a small detail that meaningfully affects the result.
A skin wound has multiple layers, and using each properly during closure determines how the scar matures. The surgeon places absorbable deep sutures to bring the deeper tissues together and take the tension off the wound — these are the structural sutures that determine whether the wound stretches over the following months. Surface sutures then bring the skin edges together without tension, allowing them to heal cleanly.
A single-layer closure relies on surface sutures to take all the wound tension. This produces wider scars and more risk of stretching, pigmentation and hypertrophy. A layered closure takes slightly longer to perform but produces substantially better results.
Different anatomical areas need different sutures. Fine 5/0 or 6/0 sutures for sensitive areas. heavier sutures for high-tension body sites. Absorbable subcuticular running sutures (sutures placed just under the skin surface, dissolving on their own) for closure where suture removal would be awkward. Each choice an attempt to optimise the local result.
How the handles the skin during the operation matters more than most patients realise. Skin handled roughly, crushed by forceps, or held under tension during the procedure heals worse than skin handled with care. Plastic surgical training includes specific techniques for atraumatic tissue handling.
How the scar changes during healing
The scar from lipoma removal goes through three predictable phases:
Immediately after surgery, the wound is closed, swollen, and red. There may be bruising in the surrounding tissue. Sutures are typically at 7–14 days depending on location — earlier for face and neck, later for back and limbs. The wound edges are knitting together but are not yet strong; protect from physical stress.
The scar appears as a pink or red firm line. This is the most active phase of — collagen is being laid down and the scar is . The redness and firmness can look more alarming than the eventual scar will be — this is normal and not a sign that something has gone wrong. The scar typically reaches peak redness around 4–6 weeks.
Over the following months, the scar gradually fades from red through pink to its final pale colour. The firmness softens and the scar becomes more pliable. By 6 months, most scars are noticeably less prominent than they were at 6 weeks. By 12 months, the scar has reached its final mature appearance — typically a fine pale line that is hard to see without close inspection.
The full timeline of mature scar appearance is detailed in our guide on — the timeline for lipoma scars is essentially the same.
Factors that affect how visible the final scar is
Some areas heal beautifully and produce almost invisible scars; others tend to scar more prominently regardless of technique:
For a lipoma on the shoulder or upper back, expect a slightly more visible scar than for the same on the face — this reflects the biology of the area, not the surgical .
Patients with darker skin types (Fitzpatrick IV–VI) have a higher rate of hyperpigmentation (the scar becoming temporarily darker than the surrounding skin) and a higher rate of hypertrophic and keloid scarring. Both can be managed but require closer attention during . Sun protection during the first 6–12 months is particularly important.
Patients with a history of keloid scarring — particularly on the chest, shoulders, earlobes or deltoid area — should discuss this at consultation. The surgical approach can be adapted, and post-operative scar management can be intensified to reduce the risk of repeat keloid formation. See for the broader discussion.
Larger lipomas need longer incisions and produce longer scars. The relationship is roughly linear — a 5cm lipoma produces a roughly 5cm scar. This is one of the practical reasons for not delaying lipoma removal indefinitely; lipomas can slowly grow over years, and a small lump removed now leaves a smaller scar than the same lump removed in five years’ time.
This is the most significant variable the surgeon controls. Excellent technique can produce a fine scar in difficult locations; poor technique can produce a visible scar even in forgiving anatomical areas. For more on what plastic surgical adds to wound closure, see — the same principles apply to lipoma excision.
What patients can do to support the best scar outcome
Keep the wound clean and dry until your surgeon advises . Don’t pick at scabs. Avoid strenuous physical activity that stretches the wound for the first 2–3 weeks. Attend follow-up appointments.
A new scar contains immature melanocytes that overreact to UV exposure. A few unprotected sun exposures during the first 6 months can leave the scar permanently darker than the surrounding skin — in skin types III–VI. SPF 50 sunscreen over the scar for at least 6 months, ideally 12, is one of the most important interventions a patient can make for the final result.
Silicone gel or silicone sheeting has the strongest randomised-trial evidence for improving the final scar appearance. Started once the wound is fully closed (usually around 2 weeks post-op) and continued for at least 3 months — applied twice daily for gel, or worn 12+ hours a day for sheets — silicone reduces redness, thickness and itchiness, and lowers the risk of hypertrophic scarring. For more detail, see
Once the wound has fully closed (around 4 weeks), gentle scar massage with an unperfumed moisturiser for 5–10 minutes twice daily helps soften and flatten the scar. Avoid massage on a wound that has not yet closed.
Smoking impairs wound healing and measurably worse scars. Stopping smoking for at least 2 weeks before and 4 weeks after is an important contributor to good outcomes. Alcohol in moderation is not a major issue, but heavy consumption in the immediate post-operative period is best avoided.
Wound healing depends on protein synthesis. A reasonable diet with adequate protein, normal sleep, and good hydration supports healing. Specific supplements are not generally needed for routine healing in well-nourished patients.
If the scar doesn’t heal well — what then?
Most lipoma removal scars mature uneventfully to a fine pale line. A small minority do not — they may become raised, red, itchy or wider than expected. treatment options exist for problematic scars:
For the full evidence-based menu of scar treatments, see . Most scar revision is performed at 12+ months after the original procedure, once the original scar has fully matured.
What we don’t recommend
Frequently asked questions
Yes — any procedure that involves an incision produces some form of scar. With plastic surgical technique, the scar from a typical lipoma excision matures over 6–12 months to a fine pale line.
Approximately the diameter of the lipoma — 1–4cm. A 2cm lipoma produces a roughly 2cm scar.
No scar is truly invisible. With careful and good post-operative scar management, the final scar is usually a fine pale line that is difficult to see without close inspection.
The scar matures over 6–12 months. The first 6 weeks are typically the most prominent; from 8 weeks the scar starts to fade noticeably; by 6 months it is much less visible; by 12 months it has reached its final appearance.
Most lipoma excision scars heal flat. Some patients — particularly those with darker skin types or a personal history of hypertrophic scarring — have a higher risk of raised scars. This can be reduced with diligent silicone treatment and sun protection.
Once the wound has fully closed, usually around 2 weeks after surgery. Your surgeon will confirm at the follow-up appointment.
Most do, but if a scar develops adversely, options including continued silicone, injection, laser treatment, Morpheus8 or surgical scar revision can be considered. Most scar revision is performed at least 12 months after the original procedure.
Liposuction-based approaches smaller scars but leave the capsule behind and have higher recurrence. They are not the right choice for most patients seeking definitive removal.
Yes — face and neck heal beautifully; shoulders, chest and upper back tend to scar more prominently. The expected scar quality reflects the local anatomy, not the surgical technique alone.
Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated plastic surgery clinic at 95–97 Baker Street, Marylebone. is performed by GMC-registered consultant plastic surgeons under local anaesthetic as day-case procedures. Complete capsule excision is standard, with layered closure and incision orientation along skin tension lines for optimal scar outcomes. Every excised lipoma is sent for histological . No GP referral is required.
For related guides, see , , , , , and .
Centre for Surgery · CQC-regulated · GMC specialist-registered surgeons · · · ·
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Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated hospital on London’s Baker Street, delivering plastic and cosmetic through GMC-registered specialist surgeons. Our expertise spans facial procedures including and , , for men, and body procedures such as and . Patient safety, surgical excellence and natural-looking results sit at the heart of everything we do.
Centre for Surgery is a CQC-regulated private hospital on London’s iconic , offering plastic and cosmetic surgery led by GMC-registered consultant surgeons.
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