Botox used to live inside a doctor's office. Now it shows up in strip malls, apartment buildings, and shops next to your coffee place.
Landlords are leasing to clinics that pull in over a million bucks a year from a few small rooms. The catch is who's actually holding the needle.
Why The Boom Is Still Running
Med spas sell the easy stuff like Botox, fillers, laser care, body work, and now GLP-1 weight loss shots. The model is simple to bet on.
Low overhead, fat margins, and clients who keep coming back every few months. That's why landlords love them.
Lenders like PowerPay are also stepping in to spread the cost of shots for clients. That lifts demand even more.
In Chicago, one clinic owner opened her med spa inside her own apartment tower. A few clients ended up moving into the building after their first visit.
The average med spa pulled in about $1.4 million in 2023. Each spa saw roughly 245 clients a month, with each visit costing about $527.
Those numbers explain why a small suite next to a coffee shop now bids for the same space as a nail salon or a yoga studio.
Where The Risk Is Hiding
The growth is running ahead of the rules. In most states, nurses or even unlicensed staff can do shots with no doctor on site.
That setup led to a $1.2 million court loss against a Pennsylvania clinic in 2023. The case stemmed from bad shots given by a nurse with a suspended license.
A Texas woman died after an IV treatment given by an unlicensed person at a med spa. That's the kind of story that tends to move state lawmakers fast.
Illinois now wants med spas owned by licensed pros. Rhode Island just passed a Medical Spas Safety Act.
Ohio's top lawyer is going after weight-loss shot claims. Texas tried to ban unlicensed people from doing Botox, but the governor vetoed the bill.
Industry vets say the fast spread is starting to thin out the talent pool. That's the kind of warning that tends to show up before a sector gets reset by either new rules or a big lawsuit.
A Texas lawyer told one trade outlet that lawmakers don't yet take the issue too seriously. That tone tends to flip the moment a bigger case hits the news.
What To Watch
The story breaks in two ways for investors. The real estate side still has room to run.
The unit math works and the demand is real. The shop side is where the risk piles up.
States that tighten rules will reshape who can run a clinic. That may push some owners out.
Beauty has long been a spend that holds up in down years. The big test is whether new rules catch up before a bad story does it first.
The other piece worth watching is how landlords think about med spa risk. If a state cracks down, the same suite that was a star tenant can sit empty fast.
A clean operator with the right licenses still looks like a great tenant. The risk is for those who got into the field on the easy mode that may now end.
