Last verified: April 2026. Prices, physicians, and English support can change — confirm directly when booking.
Vaginal rejuvenation Tokyo searches in 2026 cover a wide menu — fractional CO2 devices, radiofrequency, PRP O-Shot, hyaluronic acid labia filler, and surgical vaginoplasty — and the evidence behind each varies considerably. This guide covers what actually has good evidence versus what is a supporting treatment in a broader plan, realistic 2026 prices in ¥ and USD, the English-speaking Tokyo clinics worth shortlisting, and how Kanbi handles the Japanese booking side of a sensitive consult.
"Vaginal rejuvenation" is a marketing umbrella over several very different treatments aimed at very different concerns — post-partum vaginal laxity, vulvar atrophy and dryness related to genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM), mild stress urinary incontinence, labial volume loss, and aesthetic change to the vulva. Non-surgical energy-based devices (fractional CO2 like MonaLisa Touch or FemiLift, Er:YAG like IntimaLase, and radiofrequency like ThermiVa or Votiva / FormaV) are the category patients usually mean when they ask about laser vaginal tightening Tokyo options. The evidence base for these devices on patient-reported outcomes (dryness, sensation, mild laxity) is growing but still considered preliminary by major bodies — the US FDA has issued warnings about marketing of these devices for conditions like urinary incontinence and pelvic prolapse without adequate clinical evidence. They are best framed as supporting treatments in a broader plan, not standalone cures, especially where a medical alternative exists. For GSM symptoms specifically, topical vaginal estrogen is the first-line treatment in guidelines; laser is typically added when estrogen is contraindicated or insufficient. Surgical vaginoplasty (tightening via vaginal wall tissue excision and muscle plication) is a separate and more invasive category reserved for anatomically significant laxity after childbirth; it should be done by a JSAPS-credentialed plastic surgeon or a gynecologic surgeon with specific training.
The women's health department at Tokyo Midtown Clinic offers non-surgical intimate rejuvenation Tokyo English patients through fractional CO2 and RF devices, alongside a proper OB-GYN consult that can distinguish aesthetic concerns from treatable medical issues like GSM and urinary symptoms. The clinic's multidisciplinary setup makes it easier to get an honest triage before committing to a laser series.
A dermatology-focused clinic in Ebisu with non-surgical intimate device offerings including fractional CO2 and radiofrequency. The clinic keeps protocols conservative and sets expectations realistically — typically framing non-surgical vaginal rejuvenation as a supporting treatment alongside lifestyle and medical care rather than a standalone cure.
An international-focused practice in Azabu-Juban that handles feminine rejuvenation Tokyo cases across a broader spectrum — non-surgical devices, HA filler for labia majora, and surgical labiaplasty or vaginoplasty through the plastic surgery side. English-first intake and consent keep a sensitive consult straightforward.
AOI 7 offers non-surgical vaginal rejuvenation through radiofrequency and fractional CO2 devices in a central Ginza location. Good option for patients already receiving other aesthetic treatments at the clinic who want to add intimate rejuvenation to the visit. Consult style is brisk but the staff are familiar with English-speaking patients.
A dermatology clinic in Aoyama offering non-surgical laser and RF-based feminine rejuvenation. The practice uses conservative device settings and tends to package protocols as multi-session plans with clear expected outcomes. Good for patients wanting a well-established aesthetic clinic rather than a women's health specialty center.
Prices below are 2026 ranges by modality. Non-surgical protocols are almost always quoted as 3-session series; surgical options are one-time procedure costs.
| Modality | Typical Structure | Price Range (¥) | Price Range (USD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fractional CO2 (MonaLisa Touch / FemiLift) | 3 sessions, 4–6 weeks apart | ¥220,000–¥700,000 series | $1,467–$4,667 |
| Er:YAG (IntimaLase) | 3 sessions, 4–6 weeks apart | ¥180,000–¥600,000 series | $1,200–$4,000 |
| Radiofrequency (ThermiVa, Votiva / FormaV) | 3 sessions, 4–6 weeks apart | ¥200,000–¥550,000 series | $1,333–$3,667 |
| PRP O-Shot (single injection) | 1 session, repeat annually | ¥80,000–¥200,000 | $533–$1,333 |
| HA filler labia majora (per syringe) | 1–4 mL, lasts 9–18 months | ¥100,000–¥300,000 | $667–$2,000 |
| Autologous fat transfer labia majora | 1 surgical session | ¥300,000–¥700,000 | $2,000–$4,667 |
| Surgical vaginoplasty / perineoplasty | 1 procedure | ¥600,000–¥1,500,000 | $4,000–$10,000 |
Prices exclude consult fees, pre-op labs (for surgical), and post-treatment medications unless stated. ¥150 = $1 used for conversion. Labiaplasty (labia minora reduction) is a separate procedure, typically ¥350,000–¥800,000.
Not sure which clinic to choose, or how to book in Japanese? Kanbi handles clinic selection, Japanese communication, and booking for vaginal rejuvenation treatments. Submit a treatment request → kanbicare.com
Budget ¥180,000–¥700,000 for non-surgical laser or RF protocols (typically 3 sessions) in 2026. Single PRP O-Shot sessions run ¥80,000–¥200,000. HA filler to labia majora runs ¥100,000–¥300,000 per syringe. Surgical vaginoplasty or perineoplasty runs ¥600,000–¥1,500,000 as a one-time procedure. Consult fees (¥5,000–¥15,000) apply at most clinics.
Non-surgical energy-based protocols are typically 3 sessions spaced 4–6 weeks apart, with annual maintenance sessions to sustain results. Improvement in patient-reported outcomes (dryness, comfort, mild laxity) typically lasts 12 months before maintenance is considered. HA labia filler lasts 9–18 months per syringe. Surgical vaginoplasty is a one-time procedure with long-lasting anatomical change, though childbirth after surgery can reverse the effect.
Evidence varies by modality. Non-surgical energy devices (fractional CO2, Er:YAG, RF) have preliminary evidence for improvement in vulvar and vaginal symptoms including dryness and mild laxity, but large randomized controlled trials remain limited and regulatory bodies have flagged overclaiming. For GSM symptoms specifically, topical vaginal estrogen has stronger evidence and is usually the right first-line treatment. Surgical vaginoplasty has clear anatomical evidence — it reliably tightens vaginal caliber — though patient-reported sexual satisfaction outcomes are individual. Honest framing: non-surgical devices are a supporting treatment in a broader plan, not a standalone cure.
Non-surgical devices are low-risk in experienced hands. Expected side effects: mild spotting, transient swelling, and temporary discomfort for 2–5 days. Less common risks include burns with aggressive laser settings, infection, and rare cases of prolonged pain or scarring. Surgical vaginoplasty carries standard surgical risks — bleeding, infection, wound healing issues, and the possibility of over- or under-tightening requiring revision. A clear consent discussion about realistic outcomes and limitations is essential before starting any protocol.
Single-session treatments (PRP O-Shot, HA filler, one laser or RF session) can be done in a short visit. A full 3-session non-surgical protocol needs 3–4 months and is better suited to residents or patients who can plan return visits. Surgical vaginoplasty requires 10–14 days in Japan for pre-op labs, surgery, and suture removal, plus a 6-week abstinence and no-exercise window that extends past the Tokyo visit.
Laser (fractional CO2, Er:YAG) uses focused light energy to create micro-thermal injury zones in the vaginal mucosa, stimulating collagen remodelling. RF (ThermiVa, Votiva / FormaV) uses radiofrequency energy delivered through an external or intravaginal probe, generating controlled volumetric heating in the tissue without ablation. Both aim at similar clinical outcomes; laser tends to be more studied in gynecology literature, while RF tends to have less downtime and covers external vulvar tissue more comfortably. Evidence quality is comparable.
Yes — combinations are common. Non-surgical laser or RF is often combined with HA filler to the labia majora to address both internal and external concerns. PRP O-Shot is sometimes layered into laser protocols. For patients also considering body contouring (mini abdominoplasty, mons pubis reduction, or monsplasty), the aesthetic surgery side and the rejuvenation device side can be sequenced in one treatment plan. Topical vaginal estrogen is a medical adjunct that works well alongside laser for GSM symptoms.
Tokyo sits mid-range in the East Asian market for intimate rejuvenation. Seoul has aggressive laser package pricing; Bangkok can be cheaper on headline price with wider quality variance. Tokyo's value is the combination of access to well-known device brands (MonaLisa Touch, FemiLift, Votiva), a conservative Japanese aesthetic medicine culture that sets realistic expectations, and the option to get a proper OB-GYN triage at multidisciplinary clinics before committing to a protocol. For English-speaking care on a sensitive topic, Tokyo is competitive.
Vaginal rejuvenation Tokyo options in 2026 span five English-capable clinics across dermatology, women's health, and plastic surgery — with modalities from MonaLisa Touch fractional CO2 and Votiva RF to HA labia filler and surgical vaginoplasty, and pricing from ¥80,000 per session to ¥1,500,000 for surgery. The right path depends on the specific concern and whether a medical alternative (like vaginal estrogen for GSM) should come first. Kanbi shortlists the right clinic for your concern, handles the Japanese-language booking for a sensitive consult, and coordinates multi-session protocols in English — submit a treatment request at kanbicare.com to start.
Related Kanbi guides: mommy makeover in Tokyo and laser hair removal in Tokyo.
Found this helpful? Share it:
Curated aesthetic medicine for international visitors in Tokyo. English-speaking. Verified.
Exceptional.