Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jul 5
England, Scotland Tighten Cosmetic Injectable Laws After 1 UK BBL Death and Rising Harm
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jul 5

England, Scotland Tighten Cosmetic Injectable Laws After 1 UK BBL Death and Rising Harm

2 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jul 5

Summary

  • England and Scotland are moving to license non-surgical cosmetic procedures after serious injuries and the first known UK death following a non-surgical BBL in 2024.
  • Nearly 20,000 Botox practitioners were identified across the UK in 2025, up from just over 3,500 in 2023, with non-medical providers' share doubling to 24.8%.
  • Current UK rules let anyone train, buy dermal fillers and treat the public, while campaigners say fragmented enforcement has allowed unsafe injectors, counterfeit products and prescription-only medicines to circulate.
  • Scotland's new law is due from September 2027, restricting Botox and fillers to regulated settings and banning them for under-18s; England says its scheme will first target high-risk procedures such as non-surgical BBLs.
  • More than a decade after the Keogh review called dermal fillers a 'crisis waiting to happen,' ministers still must draft detailed rules and fund local enforcement before the new regime takes effect.

Insights

While Europe restricts cosmetic injections to doctors, why can almost anyone in the UK still legally wield a needle?
With rules lagging years behind warnings, how many more must be harmed before the UK’s beauty industry is controlled?