Rosie O’Donnell Got a Facelift That Cost More Than a Car — And She’s Surprisingly Honest About It
Rosie O’Donnell has never been one to sugarcoat things, and her latest Substack post is no exception. The 64-year-old comedian and former talk show host dropped a refreshingly candid update about the facelift she got back in January — and yes, it cost her more than any car she’s ever bought.
In a piece titled something along the lines of personal reckoning, Rosie admitted she used to be morally opposed to facelifts. Not just casually against them — she saw them as a “betrayal” of feminism, aging gracefully, and sisterhood worldwide. She positioned herself as the unofficial president of the “We Will Never Ever Get One” club.

Then life (and gravity) had other plans. After losing a significant 50 pounds, Rosie looked in the mirror and felt her face was “melting with intention.” She tried the evolved, enlightened approach — telling herself it was natural, earned, a badge of honor. But eventually she hit a wall: “How earned does it have to look?” Acceptance started feeling like self-deception.
So she went for it. And apparently the bill was eye-watering. “It cost more money than I have ever paid for a car,” she wrote, with that classic Rosie bluntness that makes you snort-laugh even when she’s being vulnerable.
Look, I respect the transparency. In an industry (and a culture) obsessed with youth and filtered perfection, it’s rare for someone of Rosie’s generation and profile to admit both the insecurity and the decision to do something about it. She’s not pretending this was some casual Tuesday errand — she’s acknowledging the internal conflict many women quietly wrestle with after major weight loss, menopause, or just the passage of decades.
At 64, Rosie has lived a very public life full of triumphs, controversies, heartbreaks, and comebacks. She’s raised kids, battled health issues, lost loved ones, and stayed unapologetically herself through it all. Getting a facelift doesn’t erase any of that — if anything, her willingness to talk about it openly feels like another layer of that same authenticity.
We’re in this weird era where people shame others for “getting work done” while simultaneously flooding their feeds with filters and fillers. Rosie’s post cuts through some of that noise. She’s not selling the procedure as a miracle or a moral failure — just a personal choice that came with a hefty price tag and some complicated feelings.
Whether you’re team “do whatever makes you feel good” or team “age naturally,” it’s hard not to appreciate her candor. Plastic surgery is expensive, emotional, and deeply personal. Owning that publicly? That still takes guts.
What do you think — does Rosie’s honesty make you more understanding of people who choose to get work done later in life, or do you still feel strongly about letting faces “melt with intention”? Either way, she’s out here living (and lifting) authentically. Respect.