Bella is a Korean aesthetics brand whose catalog spans four very different product types: a cross-linked HA filler line (Bella Fill), a PDRN skin booster (Bella Booster), a fat-dissolving lipolytic (Bella Lipo), and a botulinum toxin type A (Bella Tox). Each one does a different job and carries a different risk profile. The official catalog is below for your records.

What is in the Bella filler line?

Bella Fill is the brand’s cross-linked hyaluronic acid filler range, listed in three tiers: Fine, Deep, and Volume. The catalog states a composition of 24 mg/mL hyaluronic acid with 0.3% lidocaine for comfort. The tiers are described for different depths of correction, from fine surface lines to deeper contouring of areas like the cheeks and chin.

In plain terms, an HA filler adds volume by sitting in the tissue and holding water. That is different from a biostimulator, which prompts your own collagen. HA fillers are also the one category here with clearer regulatory footing. The FDA dermal fillers page explains how soft-tissue fillers are reviewed and what risks they carry. For a sibling in this category, see our note on Caratfill Sub-Q.

Log Notes. This walks through the Bella range and the general category science, not how any product is used. It gives no doses, volumes, depths, injection points, or technique, all of which live in the official catalog and belong to a licensed professional. Nothing here is medical advice.

What about the booster, lipolytic, and tox options?

Bella Booster is the brand’s skin booster, listing PDRN (salmon DNA), non-crosslinked HA, and niacinamide. The catalog frames it around hydration, elasticity, and brightening rather than volume. PDRN-style boosters are studied for the ingredient class, not guaranteed for you, so treat reported benefits as “studied,” not settled. Our PDRN explainer covers that category in more depth.

Bella Lipo is the injectable lipolytic, listing phosphatidylcholine (PPC), sodium deoxycholate, and L-carnitine, marketed for areas like the chin and abdomen. One honest caveat here matters most: injectable fat-dissolvers in this class are largely not FDA-approved in the US, and their regulatory status varies widely by country. For related context on this category, see Bo-DCA and Kabelline.

Bella Tox is described as a high-purity botulinum toxin type A for the temporary improvement of moderate to severe glabellar lines. Toxins are handled very differently from fillers, both clinically and on paper. Whether any of these suits you is a decision for a licensed professional, never a catalog.

What is worth tracking, whichever you use?

Because the Bella range mixes categories with different timelines, a dated record is what keeps an honest picture. A filler shows volume on the day. A booster builds gradually. A lipolytic and a toxin each follow their own arc. Memory blurs all of that, so write down what you received, when, and how it felt.

This is the kind of multi-product course Dosefi is built to log: you add whichever Bella product you receive as a treatment, record each session with its date and a photo, set a reminder for the next visit, and let your self-rated trends build over the cycle. A few fields to keep:

  • Which product and tier (for example, Bella Fill Deep vs Bella Booster)
  • The date, and the area treated on a face or body map
  • A same-angle, same-light photo each session
  • How it felt, and any follow-up window your provider gave you

A grounded takeaway

Bella is one brand name covering four jobs: an HA filler line, a PDRN booster, a lipolytic, and a toxin. They are not interchangeable, and several categories here are generally not FDA-approved in the US. Keep a dated, honest record, treat reported benefits as studied rather than promised, and leave candidacy and the procedure itself to a licensed professional. The official catalog is attached for your reference.

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