Post-Facial Follow-Up Texts: 4 Templates

Tips Tanya Brooks 4 min read March 21, 2026
Post-Facial Follow-Up Texts: 4 Templates

It is 9pm. Your last facial ended three hours ago and you are wondering if the first-time peel client is freaking out about the redness. You could text her. But you do not know what to say without sounding like something went wrong. So you say nothing and check your phone six times before bed.

The fix is four pre-written texts. Copy them into your phone’s text replacement or your booking software’s automated messages. Send the right one at the right time.

Why text, not email

SMS open rates sit at 98%, and 90% of messages are read within three minutes. Beauty industry email open rates hover around 25 to 35%. A text gets read. An email gets buried.

98% SMS open rate vs. 25-35% for beauty industry emails (Omnisend, 2025)

The four esthetician follow-up texts

Adjust product names and timing to match your menu. The structure stays the same: acknowledge, inform, give a next step.

⚠️ Do not ask 'How's your skin?'

Open-ended check-ins put the burden on the client to diagnose their own face. They do not know if what they are experiencing is normal. Instead, tell them what to expect. “You may see light flaking for 2-3 days” is useful. “How’s everything going?” creates anxiety.

What changes

The purging text is the one that saves relationships. Clients who would have panicked and booked elsewhere instead text you a photo, get reassurance, and show up for their next appointment. A Zenoti survey found that 48% of wellness providers lost long-time clients in the past year. For solo estheticians, losing one regular means $2,000 to $4,000 in annual revenue gone. A 30-second text prevents that.

Every reply a client sends back is data for your client notes. Every template follows the same structure: name what the client is experiencing, tell them it is normal, give one action. If you already have prep texts going out before the appointment, these close the loop on the other side.

Four texts. Thirty seconds each. You stop wondering at 9pm whether someone’s face is on fire.

Tanya Brooks
Tanya Brooks

Esthetician running a one-person studio. Writes about systems, scheduling, and making solo work sustainable.