Soften the Tired Look
A hollow, shadowed under-eye is one of the first things people notice in the mirror — it reads as tired, drawn, or older than you feel, even after a full night's sleep. Under-eye filler — also called tear trough filler or non-surgical blepharoplasty — uses a small, careful amount of hyaluronic-acid (HA) dermal filler placed in the groove between the lower lid and cheek to restore that lost volume, soften the shadow that reads as a dark circle, and refresh the whole eye in a single visit with no incisions. Done well, it is one of the most satisfying treatments in aesthetics. Done carelessly, the under-eye is also one of the least forgiving areas on the face. Dr. Farhad Rafizadeh — a board-certified plastic surgeon with more than 40 years focused on facial aesthetics in Morristown, NJ, and a surgeon who also operates on the lower eyelid — brings that dual perspective to every under-eye he treats: he knows when a little filler is exactly right, and when the honest answer is to do nothing, or to consider surgery instead.
“The tear trough rewards restraint. The mistake I see corrected most often is too much filler, placed too high or too superficially — it puffs, it holds water, sometimes it casts a bluish tint. A conservative amount, placed deep on the bone, can take ten years off a tired eye. But filler cannot fix a true fat bag, and it cannot fix loose lower-lid skin — if that's what you have, I'll tell you, because I'm the one who also does the surgery.”
— Dr. Farhad Rafizadeh, MD FACS
How Under-Eye Filler Works
Hyaluronic acid is a sugar molecule the body already makes; the HA in dermal fillers is a smooth, biocompatible gel that adds volume right where it's placed. The tear trough has special rules. Because the lower-eyelid skin is the thinnest on the body and the area swells easily, the right product here is a soft, low-cohesivity, low-water-absorption HA — Dr. Rafizadeh favors Restylane for the under-eye precisely because it lifts gently without drawing in water and puffing. The filler is placed deep, against the bone, in small amounts — often using a blunt cannula rather than a sharp needle to reduce bruising and to move safely around the eye's blood vessels — and then molded so the hollow fills evenly and the lid-to-cheek line becomes smooth. The result is visible immediately, settles over about two weeks, and — a key safety advantage — can be dissolved with an enzyme (hyaluronidase) if it's ever too much or sits unevenly.
What Under-Eye Filler Treats
Tear trough filler is matched to hollowing and shadow — not to fat bags, loose skin, or pigment. The concerns it addresses best include:
Restores volume in the tear trough groove between the lid and cheek — the sunken, skeletonized look that deepens with age, genetics, and post–GLP-1 facial volume loss.
Softens the shadow that a hollow casts, which most people read as a dark circle — lifting and brightening the under-eye so you look rested rather than perpetually tired.
Smooths an abrupt step-off between the lower lid and the cheek into one continuous, youthful contour — often blended with a touch of mid-cheek support for the most natural result.
Tear Trough Filler vs. Lower Blepharoplasty
This is the decision that matters most, and it's where having a surgeon assess you is a real advantage. Tear trough filler adds volume to a hollow — it is ideal when the skin is good and there is no significant bulge, and it gives an immediate, reversible, no-downtime refresh. Lower blepharoplasty (lower eyelid surgery) is the better answer when the problem is structural: true herniated fat bags that bulge forward, excess or crepey lower-lid skin, or festoons. Filling on top of a fat bag only makes the lower lid heavier. In fact, the most elegant lower-lid surgery often repositions the patient's own fat down into the tear trough hollow — a permanent, natural correction that solves the bag and the hollow at once. Because Dr. Rafizadeh performs eyelid surgery — including lower blepharoplasty — as well as injectables, he can show you which problem you actually have and recommend filler, surgery, or a combination on the merits.
→ Schedule a ConsultationMeet with Dr. Rafizadeh personally to discuss your goals and a personalized plan. Call (973) 267-0928 or request a consultation online.When Filler Is Not the Answer
This is the part most pages skip, and around the eye it's the part that protects you. Under-eye filler is the wrong tool when:
There are true herniated fat bags. When the lower lid bulges because orbital fat is pushing forward, filler placed below the bag to “blend” it can help slightly in mild cases but more often adds weight and puffiness. Real bags are corrected by lower blepharoplasty, which removes or repositions that fat.
There are festoons or malar edema (fluid). Some patients have puffiness from chronic fluid or lax malar “festoon” mounds on the cheek. HA filler attracts water, so injecting it into a fluid-prone area can make the swelling visibly worse. These need a different plan entirely — not tear trough filler.
The skin is very thin and the goal is unrealistic. Extremely thin, dark, or crepey lower-lid skin can show filler as a bluish hue (the Tyndall effect) or as visible lumps, and true skin pigment won't change with filler at all. In those cases conservative treatment, structural fat grafting, surgery, or simply skincare and lasers for pigment may serve you far better. When filler isn't right, Dr. Rafizadeh will say so rather than inject anyway.
Treatment & What to Expect
An under-eye filler visit is quick — usually 20 to 30 minutes. After examining the lower lid and confirming filler is the right call, Dr. Rafizadeh numbs the skin and places a small amount of soft HA deep in the tear trough, typically with a blunt cannula, checking symmetry as he goes. You see the result immediately, though it settles fully over about two weeks. The most common after-effect is a bruise — the under-eye is rich in tiny vessels — along with mild swelling for a few days, so most patients plan around any events and avoid blood thinners, alcohol, and strenuous exercise for a day or two beforehand and after. Because important vessels run near the eye, this is an area where the injector's anatomical knowledge genuinely matters, which is one reason many patients choose to have it done by a plastic surgeon rather than at a walk-in med spa. A follow-up at about two weeks confirms the result, and a tiny touch-up — or, rarely, a dissolve-and-redo — can fine-tune it.
Are You a Candidate?
The ideal candidate has genuine under-eye hollowing or shadowing with good skin quality and no significant fat bulge, and wants a refreshed look without surgery or downtime. It suits patients across a wide age range — from those in their late 20s and 30s noticing early hollowing or post-weight-loss volume loss, to older patients who want a conservative refresh and aren't ready for surgery. It is not the right fit for prominent fat bags, loose or festooned lower-lid skin, fluid-prone puffiness, or pure pigment — and an honest consultation will say so. Patients who are pregnant or breastfeeding, or who have an active infection in the area, should defer. At your visit, Dr. Rafizadeh examines the eyelid, explains exactly what is causing your under-eye appearance, and recommends the honest best path — tear trough filler, lower eyelid surgery, fat grafting, or simply reassurance.
Under-Eye Filler in New Jersey
Dr. Rafizadeh offers under-eye and tear trough filler in Morristown, NJ for patients throughout New Jersey — including Essex, Morris, Union, Somerset, and Bergen counties — as well as those traveling from New York City and beyond. As a board-certified plastic surgeon who also operates on the eyelids, he brings a structural, surgeon's understanding to a delicate treatment too often delegated to a technician — placing a conservative amount where it brightens a tired eye, and steering you toward surgery or skincare when those are the better answer. To explore related options, see dermal fillers, eyelid surgery, facial fat grafting, and brow lift, or browse the before & after gallery.
Sources & References
- American Society of Plastic Surgeons. “Dermal Fillers — What to know.” plasticsurgery.org
- American Society for Dermatologic Surgery. “Tear Trough / Under-Eye Treatment — Soft-Tissue Fillers.” asds.net
- Sharad J. “Dermal Fillers for the Treatment of Tear Trough Deformity: A Review of Anatomy, Treatment Techniques, and Their Outcomes.” Journal of Cutaneous and Aesthetic Surgery. PubMed
- Goldberg RA, et al. “Tear Trough Deformity: Hyaluronic Acid Filler vs. Lower Blepharoplasty — Patient Selection.” Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. PubMed
- American Society of Plastic Surgeons. “Looking into the future: Plastic surgery trends for 2026.” plasticsurgery.org
- Dr. Farhad Rafizadeh, RealSelf Q&A profile. realself.com
