About

What this publication is.

Beverly Hills Lasers covers cosmetic laser and light treatments the way a patient actually needs them covered: which device suits which skin concern, what recovery really looks like, and how the hardware running in Beverly Hills clinics has changed. No sponsored rankings, no referral fees dressed up as editorial.

Why we exist

Most of what gets written about lasers online is selling a specific machine. Clinic landing pages, affiliate posts chasing search traffic, and press releases for the newest platform all blur into the same glossy pitch. We wanted the opposite: careful, device-specific reporting that respects the reader enough to say when a treatment is riskier, slower, or less effective than the marketing suggests.

How we work

We report, we cite, and we link out. When a clinic or platform is named in a story, it is because its published work or current-generation hardware earned the mention, never because anyone paid for it. We accept no payment for coverage and run no sponsored rankings.

Editorial standards

We use careful language. We say may help rather than guarantees, and we flag when the evidence on a wavelength or protocol is still thin. We link to primary sources, peer-reviewed studies, device clearances, and society guidance whenever a claim warrants it. And we always tell readers to consult a board-certified dermatologist about their own skin, especially for pigment-prone or darker skin tones where laser settings matter most. This publication is not a substitute for medical advice.

Independence

Beverly Hills Lasers is independently run. We are not owned by a clinic, a device manufacturer, or a marketing group, and no practice can buy a place in our reporting. That independence is the whole reason the coverage is worth reading.

Tips, corrections, or pitches: hello@beverlyhillslasers.com.