Maia Medspa Brings Advanced Aesthetic and Regenerative Care to the Heart of Tysons Corner

4 min read
Maia Medspa Brings Advanced Aesthetic and Regenerative Care to the Heart of Tysons Corner

This article was written by the Augury Times






New medspa space opens inside Maia Plastic Surgery, bringing advanced care to Tysons Corner

Maia Medspa has expanded its footprint inside Maia Plastic Surgery, opening a newly outfitted space in Tysons Corner designed to offer a wider range of aesthetic and regenerative treatments. The move positions Maia’s medspa services in a busy Northern Virginia shopping and business district, where the team says it can reach more people looking for non-surgical ways to refresh how they look and feel.

The expansion is meant to do two things at once: create a comfortable, medical-grade setting for cosmetic procedures, and introduce newer technologies that sit between traditional injectables and full surgery. Patients in Tysons will now be able to access a fuller menu of services without traveling to downtown Washington or longer drives across the region.

What’s new: device-driven treatments, regenerative options and next-step services

The upgraded medspa adds several modern treatment types that are becoming common at leading aesthetic centers. These include device-based skin resurfacing, energy therapies for skin tightening, and a clearer focus on regenerative medicine approaches that aim to stimulate the body’s own repair systems.

In plain terms: resurfacing tools help smooth texture and reduce sun damage; energy-based devices target loose skin and stimulate collagen; and regenerative offerings use a patient’s own tissue to encourage healing and improve volume or texture. Maia Medspa frames these as complementary to filler and toxin injections, not as replacements.

Among the new services are gentle laser and radiofrequency treatments that offer a middle ground between light peels and surgical lifts. These treatments typically require little downtime and are aimed at people who want noticeable improvement without surgery. The medspa also emphasizes regenerative options such as platelet-rich plasma and fat-grafting techniques handled in a clinical setting. These approaches use a patient’s own biological material to enhance skin quality or restore subtle volume, and they appeal to patients who prefer “natural” solutions.

Staff at the expanded location will combine these newer tools with tried-and-true options: neuromodulators (to ease dynamic lines), dermal fillers (to replace lost volume), medical-grade skincare, and targeted injectables for contouring. The overall message from Maia’s team is integration — using the right mix of technology and biological approaches to meet a patient’s goals.

Meet Dr. Munique Maia and the team steering the expansion

Dr. Munique Maia leads the practice and the medspa’s clinical vision. She is a board-certified plastic surgeon with years of experience in aesthetic and reconstructive care. Her clinical philosophy, as described by the practice, is to combine surgical skill with conservative, natural-looking aesthetic treatments.

Supporting Dr. Maia is a clinical team made up of experienced nurses and licensed aestheticians who have training on the new devices and regenerative protocols. The practice highlights staff credentials and ongoing training as part of its quality promise — a point meant to reassure patients that these newer treatments are provided in a medically supervised environment.

Dr. Maia said the expansion reflects patient demand for accessible, high-quality non-surgical options and for regenerative care delivered under surgical-level oversight. The tone from the leadership is practical: offer more tools, keep safety front and center, and tailor plans to real-life recovery and expectations.

Who benefits: patient types, likely outcomes and safety basics

The expanded medspa is aimed at several patient groups. First, people in their 30s to 50s who want preventative or maintenance work — smoothing lines, improving skin texture, or modest contouring — will find low-downtime choices. Second, patients who prefer biologic or “natural” approaches can explore regenerative options like platelet-rich techniques or small-volume fat transfer. Third, those weighing surgery but not ready to commit may use device-based tightening and resurfacing as interim steps.

Typical treatment paths start with a consultation, followed by a tailored plan that may mix short procedures and a series of in-office sessions. Recovery varies: many non-surgical treatments have little to no downtime, while regenerative procedures or deeper resurfacing can require days to a couple of weeks of gradual healing. That’s why the medspa emphasizes clear expectations up front and clinical oversight during recovery.

On safety, Maia Medspa stresses board-certified supervision, sterile technique for any biologic handling, and device-trained staff. Those are basic but important quality points that separate a medical setting from a purely cosmetic spa.

Where to go, how to book, and what it means for Tysons

The new space is located inside Maia Plastic Surgery’s Tysons Corner office, in a retail and business hub that draws local residents and commuters. Maia Medspa is scheduling consultations by appointment and has regular weekday hours with some evening options for working patients. The practice notes a phased launch with introductory scheduling and promotions at opening.

As for cost and payment, the medspa treats most services as elective cosmetic care; standard medical insurance typically does not cover them. Price guidance is available at consultation and varies by procedure and whether a series of sessions is recommended. The expansion also brings a small local economic boost: more clinical staff, more appointments, and another medical option for Tysons residents and workers.

Overall, Maia Medspa’s upgrade aims to meet growing demand for middle-ground aesthetic care — stronger than a facial, gentler than surgery — all under the roof of a surgical practice that emphasizes safety and clinical oversight.

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