Kendall Jenner Clears the Air on Surgery Rumors: “I’ve Never Had Any Work Done”

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Welp, Kendall Jenner is once again setting the record straight this time about these plastic surgery rumors.

During the Jan. 9 episode of Owen Thiele’s In My Dreams podcast, the supermodel addressed years of speculation about her looks, shutting down claims that she’s gone under the knife like her famous sisters or other fellow celebrities.

According to Kendall, the internet narratives just aren’t matching reality. “I’ve never had any plastic surgery on my face, nothing,” Kendall told Owen Thiele on the Jan. 9 episode of his podcast In My Dreams. “I’ve never had any work done. I told you, the only thing I’ve done twice is I’ve done baby Botox in my forehead.”

And even that? She’s not exactly a fan.
“I didn’t love it, and I don’t love it,” she added. “I consider it sometimes, but then I’m like, ‘My eyebrows are so straight and low to my eyes, that I actually really enjoy the movement that I have.’”

At 30, Kendall explained that her decision to try Botox wasn’t about chasing a new face—it was minor maintenance at most. She also shared that the only other treatment she’s tried is Platelet-Rich Plasma (PrP), a procedure that uses your own blood cells to support healing.

“If anything, I did it for fine lines,” she explained. “Other than that, I’ve only done PrP.”

But beyond her own experience, Kendall made it clear that the bigger issue is the culture online—especially licensed doctors turning speculation into viral content. She didn’t hold back when talking about how often she sees professionals confidently listing off procedures she says never happened.

“What I wanted to talk about was the fact that I think it’s actually really damaging what these doctors do online,” she said. “I’ll see videos sometimes—and I can only speak for myself, of course—I’ll see videos of me and professional, licensed doctors on Instagram or TikTok, and they’re doing a breakdown of all of the surgeries that I’ve had and all of the work that I’ve had done.”

She emphasized that she’s far from the only one catching strays, noting that friends of hers—people she knows for a fact haven’t had work done—are also being publicly dissected.
“I’ve seen them of other people, of course,” Kendall explained. “People that I know that have never had those things done.”

For Kendall, the real concern is how this kind of content lands with younger audiences still figuring out their self-image.

“What I want to say is that I do find it really damaging,” she went on. “It can affect young people in such an interesting way because then they see that and they’re like, ‘Oh, my God, that’s what I have to do to look like that?’ and then they go rush and go do something silly.”

In a world where filters, fillers, and fake breakdowns blur the line between fact and fiction, Kendall Jenner is making one thing clear: not every glow-up comes from a surgeon’s office—and reckless speculation can do real harm.

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