Booking a med spa is not like buying a cleanser.
The stakes are different.
If a moisturizer is wrong, you can stop using it. If a facial is too aggressive, your skin may need a few quiet weeks. But injectables, lasers, weight-loss support, body treatments, and medical aesthetics ask for more trust before you ever sit in the chair.
That is how I would look at Refresh Port St. Lucie Medical Aesthetics in May 2026.
Not with panic. Not with blind excitement. With better questions.
Refresh presents itself as a Port St. Lucie medical aesthetics and wellness location connected to the broader Refresh Palm Beach Medical Aesthetics brand. Public pages describe services around injectables, laser hair removal, skin rejuvenation, body contouring, IV therapy, hormone support, medical weight loss, microneedling, peels, photofacials, and membership-style maintenance plans.
That is a wide menu. A wide menu can be useful, but it also means the smart move is to narrow the decision before booking.

The quick read
| Detail | What I would check |
|---|---|
| Provider | Refresh Port St. Lucie Medical Aesthetics |
| Location signal | 1430 SW Saint Lucie West Blvd, Suite 101, Port St. Lucie, FL 34986 |
| Best fit | Someone comparing injectables, lasers, skin rejuvenation, body contouring, or wellness support in Port St. Lucie |
| Main services to clarify | Tox injections, fillers, IPL, microneedling, laser hair removal, IV therapy, weight loss, hormone support |
| First question | Who will treat me, and what license or credential applies to this exact service? |
| Biggest reason to slow down | Membership pricing and broad treatment menus can make it easy to buy before the plan is clear |
I would consider Refresh if I wanted a polished medical-aesthetics setting in Port St. Lucie and I already knew the category I wanted to discuss.
I would slow down if I only had a vague goal like "look younger," "fix my skin," or "lose weight." Those are not treatment plans. They are starting points.
What Refresh Port St. Lucie seems built around
Refresh looks like a hybrid aesthetics and wellness clinic, not a simple facial studio.
The public positioning points toward:
- tox injections such as Botox, Dysport, Xeomin, and Letybo
- dermal filler
- laser hair removal
- photofacial or IPL-style skin rejuvenation
- microneedling
- chemical peels
- IV therapy and vitamin injections
- medical weight-loss support
- hormone-related wellness conversations
- body contouring and body-focused plans
- membership packages for recurring care
That mix matters because each service has a different risk profile.
A pumpkin peel, a B12 shot, a filler appointment, and a hormone conversation do not belong in the same mental bucket just because they live under one brand. They require different questions, different credentials, different aftercare, and different expectations.
The safest way to approach a broad med spa menu is to pick one goal and make the provider explain the sequence.
Start with the problem, not the package
I would not start by asking, "What deals are available?"
I would start with the real problem:
| If your goal is... | The better first question |
|---|---|
| Fine lines | Am I a good candidate for tox, and what movement should stay? |
| Volume loss | Is filler appropriate, or am I trying to solve a skin-quality problem with volume? |
| Brown spots or redness | Is this pigment, vascular redness, melasma, acne marking, or something that needs medical review first? |
| Hair removal | What laser is used, and is it appropriate for my skin tone and hair color? |
| Texture | Would microneedling, peels, skincare, or time be the cleaner first step? |
| Weight concerns | Who supervises the plan, what medication is involved, and what monitoring is required? |
| Hormone symptoms | What labs, diagnosis, follow-up, and prescribing standards apply? |
That table is the difference between shopping and being treated.
If the conversation stays vague, I would not book the higher-stakes service yet.
The first thing I would verify: who is treating me
The team matters more than the room.
Refresh's public team material names medical professionals and aesthetic providers, including a Port St. Lucie PA-C profile. That is a good starting point, but I would still ask who will perform the exact service before paying.
For any injectable, laser, microneedling, prescription, hormone, or weight-loss plan, I would ask:
- Who is doing the treatment?
- What is their license?
- Who supervises the service?
- How often do they perform this exact treatment?
- What complications are they trained to handle?
- When would they refuse treatment?
- What follow-up is included?
That last question tells you a lot. A good provider should be able to explain not only what they can do, but when they would slow you down.
Tox injections: good results are usually subtle
Botox, Dysport, Xeomin, and similar wrinkle-relaxing injections are easy to underestimate because the appointment can look quick.
Quick does not mean casual.
The better tox consult should include your facial movement, prior treatment history, medical history, asymmetry, brow position, eye heaviness risk, desired expression, timeline, and what you do not want changed.
I would ask:
| Question | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| How many units are you recommending and why? | Prevents a vague "standard amount" plan |
| Which areas are you treating? | Forehead, glabella, crow's feet, lip flip, and jaw are different decisions |
| When will I see results? | Tox is not instant |
| When should I come back if something feels off? | Follow-up clarity reduces anxiety |
| What result are you avoiding? | A thoughtful injector should protect expression, not just freeze lines |
The best tox work usually does not announce itself. It makes the face look rested without making the person look surprised, heavy, or disconnected from their own expressions.
Filler: ask what problem it is actually solving
Filler can be beautiful when it solves the right problem.
It can also become the wrong answer fast.
Before filler, I would ask whether the issue is volume loss, bone structure, skin laxity, dehydration, shadowing, dental or bite changes, or just normal anatomy. Those are different problems. Filler can help some of them. It should not be the default answer for all of them.
The questions I would bring:
- What product are you using?
- Is it reversible?
- Where exactly would it be placed?
- What is the smallest reasonable starting amount?
- What are the vascular risk zones for this area?
- What should I do if I notice unusual pain, blanching, discoloration, vision symptoms, or severe swelling?
- Do you keep reversal product available?
That may sound intense. It should sound normal.
Dermal filler is a medical procedure. The conversation should be adult enough to include both the aesthetic goal and the emergency plan.
Lasers and IPL: skin tone questions are not optional
Laser and light treatments can be useful for hair removal, redness, sun damage, pigmentation, and general skin rejuvenation.
They also require more precision than a menu name can show.
If I were considering laser hair removal, IPL, or a photofacial at Refresh, I would ask what device is being used and whether it is appropriate for my skin tone, hair color, recent sun exposure, medication list, and pigment history.
I would also ask what to stop beforehand.
That can include retinoids, acids, tanning, self-tanner, photosensitizing medications, certain procedures, or aggressive exfoliation depending on the service. The exact instructions should come from the provider, but the provider should have instructions.
I would pause if the prep sounded too casual.
Lasers are not one-size-fits-all skincare. A good consult should feel specific.
Skin rejuvenation: do not chase glow with an irritated barrier
Photofacials, microneedling, peels, and HydraFacial-style treatments all live in the glow category, but they do not do the same thing.
This is where people overbook.
They want brighter skin, smoother texture, smaller-looking pores, less redness, fewer breakouts, and better makeup in one month. Then they stack treatments before the skin has had time to show what it can tolerate.
I would ask Refresh to help prioritize:
- What is the main visible issue?
- What treatment best matches that issue?
- How many sessions are realistic?
- What should I stop using before and after?
- What downtime or irritation is normal?
- What would mean the treatment was too much?
If your skin is currently burning, peeling, rashy, or reacting to basic products, I would not book an aggressive glow treatment first. I would calm the skin, simplify the routine, and get the barrier stable before asking it to heal from a procedure.
Weight-loss and hormone services need a medical conversation
Wellness services can sound softer than aesthetics.
They are not always lower stakes.
Medical weight loss and hormone-related care should come with real screening, medical history, contraindication review, medication discussion, lab logic when appropriate, monitoring, and follow-up. I would not treat those services like a spa upgrade.
Before booking, I would ask:
- Who evaluates me?
- What medication or therapy might be used?
- What labs or records do you need?
- How do you monitor side effects?
- What happens if I stop?
- What results are realistic?
- What would make me a poor candidate?
The answer should sound like healthcare, not only lifestyle branding.
The membership question
Refresh publicly describes membership plans and recurring-service value.
Memberships can be useful if you already know you love the provider, use the services regularly, and understand the math.
I would not make a membership the first decision.
The first decision is fit. Do you like the consult? Do you trust the provider's judgment? Did they explain the plan clearly? Did they avoid pushing a bigger package than your goal requires? Did the first visit make you feel informed rather than swept along?
Then the membership math can be useful.
Ask:
| Question | Why I would ask |
|---|---|
| What exactly is included every month? | Prevents fuzzy savings claims |
| What expires? | Unused benefits can quietly lose value |
| Can I cancel? | Recurring beauty spend should not trap you |
| Can benefits be used at both locations? | Important if you travel between Jupiter and Port St. Lucie |
| Are injectables discounted or prepaid? | Discount language can hide how much you will actually use |
If the savings only work when you buy treatments you would not otherwise choose, it is not savings.
How I would compare Refresh to other Port St. Lucie options
Refresh makes the most sense to compare against other providers by service type, not by vibe.
For injectables, compare credentials, portfolio, complication protocols, follow-up, and whether the injector's aesthetic matches your face.
For lasers and skin rejuvenation, compare device type, skin-tone experience, before-and-after relevance, downtime honesty, and how they handle pigment risk.
For wellness or weight-loss services, compare medical supervision, screening, follow-up, medication transparency, and whether the plan has a realistic exit strategy.
For basic facials, compare esthetician fit, product sensitivity, extraction style, and whether the treatment leaves your skin calmer or just temporarily shiny.
That is the useful comparison. Not who has the prettiest lobby.
The consult script I would use
I would walk in with a narrow brief:
"My main goal is ____. My skin or body history includes ____. I am worried about ____. I do not want ____. What would you recommend first, what would you avoid, and why?"
Then I would listen for specificity.
A good answer should name the service, explain the reason, set expectations, discuss risk, give aftercare, and tell you what not to do.
A weak answer usually jumps straight to a package.
Red flags I would not ignore
I would pause if:
- the provider cannot explain who performs the service
- pricing is unclear until after emotional pressure builds
- every concern gets the same treatment recommendation
- medical history feels like a formality
- complication plans are brushed off
- before-and-after photos do not match your concern
- the provider promises dramatic results from a subtle treatment
- you feel rushed into a membership
- you are told a laser works for everyone without nuance
- weight-loss or hormone care is discussed without serious screening
One red flag does not always mean a place is bad. It means you need more clarity before saying yes.
Where Glass fits after the appointment
Use Glass after a med spa visit the same way you would use it after changing skincare: track the variable.
Log the treatment date, provider, area treated, product or device if known, aftercare instructions, swelling, redness, bruising, dryness, peeling, photos, and when the skin returns to baseline.
Do not take twenty photos a day. That will make you spiral. Take consistent photos in the same light and track what actually changes.
If you are also changing cleanser, moisturizer, sunscreen, actives, supplements, medication, sleep, or workouts at the same time, mark that too. Procedure results get harder to understand when the rest of the routine changes around them.
For daily skincare support around treatments, how to build a skincare routine you will actually follow is the better baseline. If your main concern is finding local providers, start with skin care near me and compare by location and treatment type.
Who I think Refresh is for
I would consider Refresh Port St. Lucie if I wanted a medical aesthetics and wellness provider with a broad menu, a polished setting, and a location that can support recurring treatments.
It looks most relevant for someone considering:
- tox maintenance
- filler consultation
- laser hair removal
- IPL or photofacial work
- microneedling or peels
- body contouring
- IV or vitamin services
- weight-loss support
- a membership after trust is established
I would not choose it just because the menu is broad. I would choose it only if the consult makes the plan feel narrower, clearer, and safer.
Bottom line
Refresh Port St. Lucie Medical Aesthetics looks like a serious Port St. Lucie option for people comparing injectables, lasers, skin rejuvenation, body contouring, and wellness services in May 2026.
The smart move is not to book the flashiest treatment first.
Book the clearest conversation first.
Ask who is treating you. Ask why that treatment fits. Ask what can go wrong. Ask what aftercare looks like. Ask what you should not do yet. Then decide whether the plan still feels right once the excitement settles.
Useful references: Refresh Port St. Lucie on Glass, Refresh official site, Refresh Port St. Lucie location page, Refresh team page, FDA on dermal fillers, and FDA on Botox Cosmetic.

