Okay, y’all, Kendall Jenner is tired of the chatter and she’s finally setting the record straight about those persistent plastic surgery rumors.
On the Jan. 9 episode of Owen Thiele’s In My Dreams podcast, the supermodel dove deep. She tackled years of speculation about her looks, firmly shutting down claims that she’s gone under the knife like her famous sisters or other celebs. Kendall Jenner made her position crystal clear.
According to Kendall herself, the stories swirling online just aren’t adding up to reality. “I’ve never had any plastic surgery on my face, nothing,” she told Owen Thiele. “I’ve never had any work done.” She admitted to only one minor thing: “The only thing I’ve done twice is I’ve done baby Botox in my forehead.”
And get this: even the baby Botox? She’s not a fan. “I didn’t love it, and I don’t love it,” she shared. Kendall even considers it sometimes, but ultimately values her natural expressions. “My eyebrows are so straight and low to my eyes, that I actually really enjoy the movement that I have,” she explained.
At 30, Kendall clarified that her foray into Botox wasn’t about a whole new look. Nah, it was just minor maintenance for “fine lines.” She also dished on the only other treatment she’s ever tried: Platelet-Rich Plasma (PrP), which, for the uninitiated, uses your own blood cells for healing.
But this isn’t just about her. Kendall made it crystal clear that the real issue runs deeper: it’s the online culture. Specifically, how licensed doctors are turning baseless speculation into viral content. She held nothing back, calling out how often she sees these “professionals” confidently listing procedures she insists she never had.
“What I wanted to talk about was the fact that I think it’s actually really damaging what these doctors do online,” she stated. She often sees videos of herself where “professional, licensed doctors on Instagram or TikTok” break down a whole list of surgeries and “work” she’s supposedly had done. And it’s all cap.
Kendall emphasized she’s not the only one catching these unwarranted shots. She’s seen the same breakdowns for her friends—people she knows for a fact haven’t had any work done. “People that I know that have never had those things done,” she noted, highlighting how widespread this issue is.
For Kendall, the biggest worry is how this content impacts young audiences still trying to figure out who they are. “It can affect young people in such an interesting way,” she stressed. They might see these videos and think, “Oh, my God, that’s what I have to do to look like that?” This could lead them to “rush and go do something silly,” she cautioned.
In a world where filters, fillers, and outright fake breakdowns blur the lines between truth and fiction, Kendall Jenner’s message is loud and clear: not every glow-up comes from a surgeon’s office. Reckless speculation doesn’t just spread rumors; it does real, tangible harm to self-image and mental health.











