You can often spot a BBL because the hips and thighs don’t match the new volume. The glute–hamstring tie‑in looks abrupt, the thighs read much smaller than the butt, and the silhouette loses that natural taper from quads to hamstrings to glutes.
Personally, the best results I’ve seen are “skinny BBLs.” The surgeon focuses on shape over sheer volume, adds a modest lift, and keeps the butt proportional to the thighs so the tie‑in still looks athletic.
There are so many surgeons who go for the “you need three rounds” sales pitch. Yes, partial fat loss is real after transfer. A second round can be reasonable if projection fades. But telling women they’ll “need” two or three every time is marketing, not medicine. At some point the look tips from enhanced to obviously artificial.
Also worth noting: you can build a shockingly good rear with glute training, hamstring work, and body‑fat recomposition. Surgery is a tool, not the only path.
And for the record, I’m pro‑choice on bodies. I’ve had surgery after losing 150 pounds and I love my results. The goal is the same either way: balance, proportion, and a shape that actually matches the legs carrying it.