TikTok is a viable channel for cosmetic practices targeting patients under 40 but a poor time investment for most general medical practices. The right evaluation depends on your specialty, demographics, and whether you can create authentic content efficiently.
Med spas and cosmetic practices targeting patients under 40 benefit most. Aesthetic treatments have significant TikTok-native content formats and many patients first discover procedures through the platform. Practices with providers willing to create genuine, engaging video content consistently, not as an obligation, are the strongest candidates.
Educational procedure content explaining what a treatment involves and showing realistic results performs consistently well. Behind-the-scenes practice content builds personality and familiarity. Trend participation using relevant sounds and formats with medical context extends reach to non-followers. Staged or overly produced content consistently underperforms authentic natural video on this platform.
Before-and-after content for certain procedures is restricted or requires specific disclaimers. TikTok has suppressed or removed medical content for policy violations more frequently than other platforms. A compliance review of content before posting is advisable for any medical practice, particularly for content involving specific results or medical claims.
For most practices the time required to produce consistent quality TikTok content produces better patient volume from equivalent time spent on Google Ads optimization, review generation, or SEO content. TikTok makes sense when a practice has someone who genuinely enjoys creating the format and can do it efficiently, not as a box-checking exercise.