The Senseless System
Make your Senseless Selection
Within the Senseless System, your selection has two parts — the format, and the strength. Here's how to make it.

The system
What the Senseless System is
Most numbing is one product, sold one way. Senseless is built as a system — three formats and three strengths — so you can match what you use to what you're actually booking. Making your Senseless Selection means two choices, and neither is about buying the most expensive: the format (how it's applied and where) and the strength (how much the session asks for). The rest of this page walks you through both, then a by-procedure guide that puts them together.
The Senseless Selector
Tell us about your appointment.
Three quick answers and we'll point you to the format and strength we'd reach for. A recommendation, not a rule — your practitioner has the final say.
Pick your treatment to see what we'd reach for.
Format
Strength
Clinical — comfort level on the Senseless Scale, not a measure of strength. Advanced — comfort level on the Senseless Scale, not a measure of strength. Professional — comfort level on the Senseless Scale, not a measure of strength. on the Senseless Scale
Stepped up for sensitive skin and/or a longer session.
We'd keep it here for this treatment — more isn't needed.
Your practitioner may apply their own numbing as standard — a quick message before you book settles it.
Selection one
Selection one: the format
Format is about where the product goes and how it stays there. Three options:
- CreamBroad coverage, the default for most appointments and larger or simpler areas.
- GelHolds exactly where you place it; for precise, facial work and longer sittings.
- SprayFast, even, hands-off coverage for large or awkward-to-reach areas.
If you're between cream and gel, the question is precision; between cream and spray, it's the size of the area.
The Senseless Scale
Selection two: the strength
Strength is separate from format — every format comes in all three. Which you choose depends on the session, not the procedure name: how large the area is, how long the appointment runs, how intense it is, and how sensitive your skin is. The three tiers are peers, not a ranking — each is matched to a different kind of session.
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Clinical
Clinical — comfort level on the Senseless Scale, not a measure of strength.
The standard. Smaller areas, shorter or routine appointments, and anyone starting out. Fits the majority of sessions.
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Advanced
Advanced — comfort level on the Senseless Scale, not a measure of strength.
The everyday choice. Larger areas, longer or more sensitive sessions. The one most people settle on for regular work.
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Professional
Professional — comfort level on the Senseless Scale, not a measure of strength.
For the most demanding sessions. The longest, most sustained, most intensive work. More than most appointments need — and we'll tell you when.
Match the strength to the session you're actually having. If you're between two tiers, start with the one closer to your booking — you can choose differently next time.
Clinical isn't a lesser version of Professional, and Advanced isn't a half-measure. The three are matched to different sessions, not different levels of quality. Most people are on Clinical or Advanced because that's the right match for their booking.
By procedure
Putting your selection together: what we recommend by procedure
The honest version — the format and strength we'd point you to for each treatment, what's overkill, and what's rarely enough. This is a guide, so it covers injectables too; on the shop pages we keep those separate.
Lip fillers
Professional is overkill here. Save it.
Botox
Many manage without numbing at all — optional, not required.
Microneedling
Clinical is rarely enough on its own.
Laser (face)
Cream for the face; spray for the body.
Laser (body)
The area decides the format and the strength.
SPMU / microblading
Clinical rarely enough for a full sitting.
Waxing (body)
Spray covers large zones fast and evenly.
Waxing (small zones)
Cream for lip, brow and small areas.
If you're unsure between two, go by the session — match the tier to how intensive the appointment is, and check with your practitioner.
Before you buy: a word most sellers skip
For a lot of treatments the practitioner applies their own numbing as standard — microneedling especially. If yours does, you may not need to bring your own, and turning up already prepared without checking can get in the way. Self-applied numbing matters most where the practitioner doesn't provide it, or where you want extra preparation on top. A quick message before you book settles it.
The essentials
The system in four lines
- Senseless is a UK cosmetic numbing range by Matrix Health Group Ltd — not a medicine.
- Three strengths (Clinical, Advanced, Professional) and three formats (cream, gel, spray). Strength and format are chosen separately.
- The right choice matches the appointment — stronger is not automatically better.
- Every formula is formulated in the United Kingdom and CPSR assessed.
Key facts
- Category
- A topical cosmetic numbing range for aesthetic and cosmetic procedures.
- Formats
- Three formats — cream, gel and spray — plus a foaming cleanser for aftercare.
- Strengths
- Three strengths — Clinical, Advanced and Professional — the Senseless Scale.
- Formulated in
- Formulated in the United Kingdom by Matrix Health Group Ltd.
UK cosmetic product, by Matrix Health Group Ltd. Not a medicine.
Common questions
What's the difference between Clinical, Advanced and Professional?
Different strengths of the same range — peers, not a ranking. Clinical is matched to shorter, routine sessions; Advanced to longer or more sensitive work; Professional to the longest, most demanding appointments. Each is built for a different kind of session.
Is one tier better than the others?
No — the three tiers are peers, not a ranking. The right choice is the one matched to your appointment, not the most intensive; for many treatments, Clinical or Advanced is the match.
How do I choose between cream, gel and spray?
Cream for broad coverage and most appointments, gel for precise facial work that needs to stay put, spray for large or awkward-to-reach areas.
Is this a medicine?
No. Senseless is a UK cosmetic product, not a medicine.