Clitoral hood reduction (also called hoodoplasty/hoodectomy/unhooding) trims excess folds of the clitoral prepuce to reduce bulk/irritation or balance appearance—most often performed with labiaplasty. It’s an elective outpatient surgery; surgeons aim to reshape hood skin only while protecting the clitoral glans and nerves. Typical operative time is <2 hours, using local anesthesia with sedation or general.


A minor genital plastic surgery that reduces excess hood skin to improve comfort or balance appearance—often paired with labiaplasty for symmetry.
People bothered by bulk, irritation, hygiene difficulties, or a top-heavy look when the labia minora are reduced. Your surgeon evaluates anatomy and goals and reviews realistic outcomes and risks.
This procedure is not designed to expose the clitoral glans. Over-exposing the glans can cause unpredictable pain/sensitivity; surgeons aim to reshape hood skin only to protect function. Discuss expectations openly during consults.
Typical surgical risks (bleeding, hematoma, infection) plus nerve injury and over/under-resection (too much or not enough tissue). Choosing an experienced, board-certified surgeon helps minimize risks.
Public plans cover medically necessary physician/hospital services; elective cosmetic procedures (like aesthetic hood reduction) are not covered. Coverage exceptions are rare—confirm with your provincial plan.
Pricing varies by city, surgeon, anesthesia, and whether it’s bundled with labiaplasty. Public listings place stand-alone hood reduction roughly ~C$3,000–$6,000; many clinics bundle or add a fee when performed with labiaplasty.
Yes—Beautifi offers flexible monthly payments. Use the Loan Calculator to estimate payments or Apply Now to check options with no obligation.
For the right candidate, a conservative, anatomy-respecting reduction can relieve irritation and balance results when paired with labiaplasty. Outcomes are best with clear goals and an experienced surgeon.

