Key Takeaways
You just got Botox, and now you are wondering what is actually safe to do. Can you shower? Can you wash your face? Do you need to skip the gym, wine, or your usual skincare routine?
Here is the simple answer: wait at least 4 to 6 hours before showering, and avoid hot water for the first 24 to 48 hours. A cool or lukewarm shower is usually fine once the injections have had time to settle.
The goal after Botox is to let the product stay where it was carefully placed. That means avoiding heat, pressure, and increased blood flow to the face during the early aftercare window.
This guide walks you through what to do after Botox, what to avoid, and when you can return to your normal routine.
Botox is an FDA-approved neuromodulator used to temporarily relax targeted facial muscles. In aesthetics, it is commonly used to soften dynamic lines, such as forehead lines, frown lines, and crow’s feet.
During treatment, your injector places small amounts of Botox into specific muscles. After injection, the product needs time to settle and begin working in the intended area. That is why the first few hours after your appointment are important.
Most Botox aftercare rules are designed to protect the placement of the product and reduce the chance of bruising, swelling, or irritation. This includes avoiding heat, pressure on the face, and activities that increase circulation too soon after treatment.
Hot water can raise your body temperature and increase blood flow to the skin. Right after Botox, that is something you want to avoid.
Botox is placed with precision. Your injector chooses the treatment area carefully based on your facial movement, muscle strength, and desired result. In the first several hours after treatment, the goal is to avoid anything that may interfere with how the product settles.
That is why hot showers, saunas, steam rooms, hot tubs, tanning beds, and intense workouts are usually avoided after Botox. These can increase heat and circulation, which may raise the risk of swelling, bruising, or unwanted product movement.
A cool or lukewarm shower is different. It does not create the same level of heat or circulation increase. So the issue is not showering itself. The issue is hot water too soon after treatment.
For the safest aftercare, wait 4 to 6 hours before showering, keep the water temperature mild, and avoid letting hot water or steam hit your face for the first 24 to 48 hours.
Here is the full shower and bathing timeline after Botox.
| Activity | Wait Time | Why |
| Cool or lukewarm shower | 4 to 6 hours | Low heat risk, safe once injections have had time to settle |
| Hot shower | 24 to 48 hours | Heat increases blood flow and diffusion risk |
| Bath (warm) | 24 to 48 hours | Same heat concern, plus lying back risks blood flow to face |
| Hot tub or jacuzzi | 48+ hours | High heat plus pressure jets, highest risk category |
| Sauna or steam room | 48+ hours | Extreme heat, prolonged exposure |
| Washing face with cool water | 4 to 6 hours | Safe with gentle pressure and cool temperature |
| Washing hair (shower) | 4 to 6 hours | Safe if water is lukewarm, avoid directing spray at the face |
If you need to rinse off sooner than 4 hours, keep the water cool and avoid direct spray on the face. Do not lean forward or apply pressure to the treated areas.
Wash your face with cool or lukewarm water after 4 to 6 hours. Keep the movements gentle. No scrubbing, no washcloth pressure, and no face tools or cleansing devices for the first 24 hours.
Use a mild, fragrance-free cleanser. Avoid anything with alpha hydroxy acids, retinol, or strong exfoliants for at least 48 hours. These ingredients increase skin sensitivity and can irritate injection sites that are still settling.
Pat your face dry with a soft towel. Do not rub. The treated areas do not need extreme delicacy, but pressure and friction are the two things to avoid in the first day.
Wash your hair after 4 to 6 hours, as long as the shower water is lukewarm and you keep hot spray off your forehead and treated areas. Tip your head back rather than forward to keep water away from your face if you had forehead or brow treatments.
Avoid blow-drying on a hot setting for the first 24 hours. Warm or cool settings are fine.
The shower question comes up most often, but it is not the only aftercare consideration that matters for your results. Here is what to know for the first 48 hours.
Stay upright for at least 4 hours after your treatment. Lying down before that raises the risk of Botox migrating to unintended areas, particularly if a nurse treated your forehead or brow.
When you do sleep, keep your head elevated on a pillow and sleep on your back for the first night. Side sleeping puts pressure on the face and can shift product if you are treated on that side. If you are a committed side sleeper, the risk is low after the first 4 hours, but the first night matters most.
Skip the gym for 24 hours after Botox. Strenuous exercise raises your heart rate and blood pressure, increases blood flow to the face, and elevates your body temperature. All of those factors create the same diffusion risk as a hot shower.
Light walking is fine. Save the spin class, heavy lifting, or hot yoga for the following day.
Avoid alcohol for at least 24 hours after your treatment. Alcohol thins the blood and increases the risk of bruising at the injection sites. It can also worsen swelling.
If you have an event the same day as your Botox appointment, hold off on the wine until the next day. One night is all it takes.
Apply makeup after about 4 to 6 hours, using light hands. Avoid pressing hard on the treated areas. For forehead injections, hold off on heavy coverage or techniques that require rubbing or pulling the skin.
Wait at least 2 weeks before booking a facial, microneedling session, laser treatment, or chemical peel. Many of these involve heat, pressure, or active ingredients that can affect how Botox settles. Your injector will tell you the specific window based on what areas were treated.
Flying is generally fine after Botox, with a few caveats. The first 4 to 6 hours are the most sensitive window, so avoid same-day flights if you can. Cabin pressure changes and recirculated dry air are unlikely to affect results, but staying upright during the flight helps.
Botox aftercare is simple once you know the timeline. Cool shower after 4 to 6 hours. Hot shower after 24 to 48 hours. Skip the gym, alcohol, and heat for the first day, and sleep on your back the first night.
Our nurse injectors cover all of this in person across all 9 of our Texas locations, including Fort Worth, Plano, Dallas, Colleyville, Argyle, Cleburne, Waxahachie, The Woodlands, and Austin.
Book a free virtual consultation, and a nurse injector will walk you through your treatment goals, side effects, and aftercare before you ever sit in the chair. You can also see how much Botox injections cost per area before you book.
The 4-hour rule refers to the minimum window before you can safely lie down, shower, or apply significant pressure to the treated area after Botox. The first 4 to 6 hours are when the product is still binding to the target muscle. Disruptions to that process, whether from heat, pressure, or lying flat, carry the highest risk of product migration.
It is possible. Hot showers increase blood flow and tissue temperature, which can accelerate diffusion of the toxin beyond the injection site. This is why the guidance is not just about timing but about water temperature. A cool shower at 4 to 6 hours is safe. A hot shower at the same time carries real risk.
For the first 24 to 48 hours, avoid hot showers, baths, saunas, and steam rooms; strenuous exercise; alcohol; lying flat for the first 4 hours; sleeping on your side the first night; applying direct pressure to treated areas; wearing tight headbands or hats that press on the forehead; and any skin treatments involving heat or active ingredients.
You can wash your hair after 4 to 6 hours. Use lukewarm water rather than hot, and angle the shower so the direct spray does not hit the treated areas on your face. Avoid blow-drying on a hot setting for the first 24 hours.
One hot shower is unlikely to ruin your results, especially if it was more than a few hours after your treatment. The diffusion risk is highest in the first 4 to 6 hours. If you showered hot within that window, keep an eye on your results over the next 2 weeks. If something looks off, contact your injector. In most cases, accidental heat exposure does not significantly affect outcomes.
Wait 24 hours before strenuous exercise. Light walking is fine on the day of your treatment. Intense workouts raise your heart rate, increase blood pressure, and generate body heat, all of which increase the risk of product migration and bruising.
Avoid alcohol for at least 24 hours. Alcohol thins the blood, which increases bruising at the injection sites and can worsen any swelling. One evening off is all it takes.
Most patients notice initial softening within 3 to 5 days. Full results are typically visible at the 10 to 14-day mark. If the results are not quite right at 2 weeks, that is the time to reach out to your injector for an assessment.
Botox lasts 3 to 4 months on average. The timeline varies depending on the treatment area, how much product was used, and individual factors like metabolism and muscle activity. Consistent treatments over time often lead to longer-lasting results as the treated muscles become less active.
Botox starts at $12 per unit at InjectCo. The total cost depends on the number of units needed for your treatment areas. Book a free virtual consultation and we will give you a personalized quote.

