Of all the regenerative treatments we offer, EZGel is the one patients find hardest to believe — because there's nothing in it but you. At Privé Aesthetics in Dallas, EZGel is a biostimulator made entirely from your own blood, with no additives, no synthetic gel, and no foreign material at all.
The aesthetics world is full of products with impressive names and long ingredient lists. EZGel is the opposite. It's one of the cleanest regenerative options available — a treatment where the active ingredient is your own biology, processed and placed back where it can do the most good. Here's how it actually works, and where it fits.
What EZGel actually is
EZGel is a 100% autologous biostimulator. "Autologous" simply means it comes from your own body. We take a small blood draw, process it (a careful heating, then cooling cycle), and that produces a natural fibrin gel rich in your own growth factors — no anticoagulants, no fillers, nothing added.
Placed into the skin, that gel does two things. First, it provides modest, soft, natural volume. Second — and this is the real point — it releases your own growth factors gradually over the following weeks, signaling your body to build collagen and improve the quality of the skin from within. It's regeneration using your own raw materials.
EZGel vs. PRP — the close cousin
If you've heard of PRP (platelet-rich plasma) or the "vampire facial," EZGel is its close relative. Both start the same way: a small blood draw, processed to concentrate your own regenerative components.
The difference is the form. PRP is a liquid — used immediately, absorbed relatively quickly. EZGel is a gel — thicker, structured, and designed to stay in place and release its growth factors slowly over weeks rather than being absorbed fast. Think of PRP as the liquid version and EZGel as the slow-release gel version of the same regenerative idea. For some goals the liquid is right; for others, the staying power of the gel wins. We talk through which fits at consultation. (We cover the broader regenerative family — PRP, PRF, and PDGF — across the journal.)
EZGel vs. synthetic filler — a different philosophy
This is where the choice gets interesting. Dermal filler is a synthetic hyaluronic acid gel that adds precise, instant volume. EZGel is your own tissue — it adds gentler natural volume up front, then works as a biostimulator, prompting your body to rebuild its own collagen over the weeks that follow.
So it isn't really filler-versus-EZGel as competitors; they answer different questions. If the goal is maximum or precisely sculpted volume, HA filler is the tool. If the goal is natural skin-quality improvement with zero synthetic material — especially for someone who prefers an all-natural route — EZGel is the answer. The two can also work together in a plan.
Where EZGel works best
EZGel shines where skin quality and gentle regeneration matter more than precise structural volume:
Under-eyes. The delicate under-eye area is one of EZGel's best applications — softening hollows and crepey texture with a natural material that's far less likely to cause the puffiness or bluish tint that synthetic filler sometimes creates here. For many patients this is the area where EZGel earns its reputation.
Overall skin texture and glow. Used across the face, EZGel improves tone, texture, and that hard-to-describe lit-from-within quality — because it's rebuilding the skin's own collagen, not coating it.
Alongside microneedling. EZGel pairs naturally with collagen-induction treatments. The two amplify each other: the microneedling opens the regenerative cascade, the growth factors feed it.
What it costs, plainly
EZGel at Privé starts at $1,000. Because it's made from your own blood and the number of areas treated varies, we confirm the plan and total at consultation. It's most often built into a regenerative plan — paired with microneedling or other treatments — rather than purchased in isolation.
How EZGel fits the bigger plan
EZGel lives in Privé's signature regenerative category — the same family as our SkinPen + Ariessence PDGF protocol. The way we think about it: Sculptra rebuilds deep structure, filler refines specific volume, and regenerative tools like EZGel and PDGF improve the quality and resilience of the skin itself. EZGel is the all-natural, your-own-biology option in that toolkit — and for the right patient, especially under the eyes, nothing else quite replaces it.
Frequently asked
How much does EZGel cost in Dallas at Privé?
EZGel starts at $1,000. Because it's made from your own blood and the number of areas varies, we confirm the plan and total at consultation. It's often built into a regenerative plan alongside microneedling rather than purchased in isolation.
What is EZGel, exactly?
A 100% autologous biostimulator — made entirely from your own blood, with no additives, anticoagulants, or synthetic material. A small blood draw is processed (heated, then cooled) into a natural fibrin gel rich in your own growth factors, which it releases over time to stimulate collagen.
How is EZGel different from PRP?
Both come from your blood. PRP is a liquid used right away and absorbed relatively quickly; EZGel is processed into a thicker fibrin gel that stays in place and releases growth factors gradually over weeks. PRP is the liquid version, EZGel the slow-release gel version of the same idea.
How is EZGel different from dermal filler?
Filler is a synthetic gel that adds instant, precise volume. EZGel is your own tissue — modest natural volume up front, then collagen stimulation over the following weeks. It's the choice for a natural, regenerative result with no synthetic material rather than maximum or sculpted volume.
Where on the face does EZGel work best?
Areas where skin quality matters more than precise volume — under-eye hollows and crepiness, overall texture and glow, and as a natural complement to microneedling. Its softness and autologous nature make it a favorite for the delicate under-eye area.
Is EZGel safe and natural?
It's about as natural as an injectable gets — made from your own blood with nothing added, so there's no risk of allergy to a foreign material. As with any injectable, expect minor risks like bruising or swelling at the site. It's performed in our Highland Park studio under our standard medical oversight.