Unleash your style — from trending hair colors to beauty tips that turn heads. Where fashion fabulous — explore the latest in hair, beauty, and beyond. Your ultimate guide to glowing up — one trend, one tip, one click at a time.

Top Aesthetic Medicine Podcasts for 2026

Top Aesthetic Medicine Podcasts for 2026

Table of Contents

From injectable innovation to medspa economics, a handful of podcasts are quietly shaping how the aesthetics industry thinks, sells, and evolves.

The explosion of audio in aesthetics was inevitable. It’s a category driven by nuance, technique, outcomes, patient psychology, and increasingly, business sophistication. Podcasts fill the gap left by social media. Longer form, less filtered, and often far more honest.

But abundance creates a new problem. Most shows recycle surface-level trends or lean too heavily on promotional guest appearances. So the real question becomes, which podcasts actually move the industry forward?

To answer that, the evaluation focused on five factors. Clinical credibility, guest quality, consistency, production standards, and, crucially, whether a show says something before it becomes obvious elsewhere.

What follows is a distilled list of the ten that matter most in 2026.

1. Inside Aesthetics

Hosts: Dr Jake Sloane and David Segal
Format: Weekly, long-form masterclasses and interviews

There’s little debate here. Inside Aesthetics has become the reference point for clinical education in the space.

Its strength lies in depth. The Masterclass Series, in particular, operates more like structured teaching than podcasting, covering everything from injectables to fringe sub-specialties with a level of rigour that most shows avoid. Topics that others sidestep, like male sexual aesthetics, advanced toxin use, emerging treatment categories, are handled without dilution.

It’s not designed for casual listeners, and that’s precisely why it works. For practitioners, it’s one of the few resources that still feels like learning rather than content consumption.

2. Aesthetics Today

Host:Gabrielle Richens
Format: Weekly, interview-led

Aesthetics Today sits in a different lane altogether. Where others go narrow, it connects the full ecosystem, clinical practice, consumer behaviour, technology, and business strategy.

The show’s defining strength is editorial intent. Episodes are built, not improvised. Conversations are structured to serve both professionals and informed patients, which is a difficult balance most podcasts fail to strike.

Recent discussions, ranging from GLP-1 implications in surgery to the shift toward regenerative treatments, demonstrate something more valuable than expertise, timing. The show consistently surfaces ideas before they become industry talking points.

That forward-looking angle, combined with a clear understanding of how clinics actually operate commercially, makes it the most complete view of the sector right now.

3. The Aesthetic Doctor

Host: Dr Judith Borger
Format: Weekly, short-to-mid length

This is where clarity wins.

Dr Borger has built a loyal audience by stripping aesthetics back to fundamentals, what works, what doesn’t, and what actually matters over time. There’s a strong emphasis on intentional ageing rather than reactive treatment cycles.

It’s particularly effective for patients who want to engage intelligently with providers, but it also serves clinicians as a reminder: simplicity, when grounded in science, is often more persuasive than complexity.

4. Aesthetically Speaking

Hosts: Robin Ntoh and Tyler Terry
Format: Business-focused discussion

This is one of the few podcasts that treats aesthetics as what it is, a commercial industry.

Topics like pricing psychology, AI-driven operations, and shifting consumer demand are explored with a level of practicality that most clinically-focused shows ignore. The discussions around trends, whether “skinimalism” or GLP-1-driven demand shifts, are less about hype and more about viability.

For owners and operators, it’s essential listening.

5. Beauty Bytes with Dr. Kay

Host: Dr Kay Durairaj
Format: Hybrid (short tips + long interviews)

High-volume, highly accessible, and occasionally polarising.

The strength here is translation. Complex procedures and trends, like “Ozempic face” or surgical combinations, are broken down into language that resonates with a wider audience without losing credibility.

It leans closer to consumer-facing content than most on this list, but that’s also why it scales.

6. Fill Me In: An Aesthetics Podcast

Hosts: Jon LeSuer and Nicole Bauer
Format: Conversational, practitioner-led

This is the ground-level view of aesthetics.

Run by working injectors, the podcast doesn’t pretend the industry is cleaner or simpler than it is. Episodes tackling unsafe trends, DIY fillers, unregulated devices, stand out because they’re rooted in real clinical exposure.

It’s less polished than others, but arguably more honest.

7. Medical Millionaire

Host: Cameron Hemphill
Format: Tactical interviews

If Aesthetically Speaking explains the landscape, Medical Millionaire focuses on execution.

Growth frameworks, revenue models, and operational scaling dominate the content. The recurring theme is clear: aesthetics is no longer a side offering, it’s a system that needs to be built properly.

For clinics chasing £40k–£80k monthly targets, this is closer to a playbook than a podcast.

8. The Dr. Randi Show

Host: Dr Randi Boyette
Format: Interviews and live recordings

Positioned at the intersection of media and medicine, this show brings in high-profile voices, surgeons, brand leaders, and executives shaping the commercial side of aesthetics.

It’s less about technique and more about influence: who’s driving demand, where attention is shifting, and how the industry presents itself to consumers.

9. Fill and Tell

Hosts: Megan Wilson and Lauren Zirgibel
Format: Informal, discussion-led

This is the industry without the filter.

The tone is deliberately unstructured, closer to conversation than content, but that’s also where its value lies. It captures the everyday reality of treatments, patient expectations, and practitioner experiences in a way more formal podcasts can’t.

Not essential, but useful context.

10. Technology of Beauty

Host: Dr Grant Stevens
Format: Innovation-focused interviews

For those interested in where aesthetics is heading rather than where it is, this is the one to follow.

Device manufacturers, founders, and innovators dominate the guest list, offering early insight into the tools and technologies that will define the next phase of treatment delivery.

The Direction of Travel

The format itself is changing.

First, AI is beginning to reshape how content is consumed, summaries, personalised learning, even role-specific insights for clinicians versus owners. Second, video is no longer optional. In a visual industry, audio-only formats are already starting to feel incomplete. Third, there’s a quiet shift toward accreditation. If governing bodies formalise podcast-based education, the hierarchy of shows will change quickly.

What’s clear is this: the gap between content and education is closing.

And in that environment, the podcasts that survive won’t be the loudest, they’ll be the ones that are early, accurate, and commercially aware.

Right now, very few meet all three criteria.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Table of Contents

Latest Posts