Harmless Moles (Naevi)

Harmless Mole (Naevus) Assessment and Cosmetic Removal in Melbourne (Ivanhoe + Diamond Creek)

Most moles are benign. If you’d like one checked, monitored, or removed for cosmetic reasons, we’ll guide you to the safest option with the best possible scar outcome.

Moles (also called naevi) are common benign growths made from pigment cells (melanocytes). Most adults have multiple moles, many of which first appear in childhood or adolescence and then change slowly over time. (1–3)

The two priorities are:

1.Safety first — confirm the mole is harmless.

2.Cosmetic planning — choose the right removal method for the best long-term appearance.

Bookings

Option 1 — Assessment and advice
[Book a 20 minute appointment with Dr Chris]
We examine the mole (often with dermoscopy), confirm whether it’s suitable for cosmetic removal, and discuss the best method.

Option 2 — Assessment + potential same-day laser
[Book a combined appointment: 20 minute assessment with Dr Chris + 20 minute laser session]
During the assessment we examine the mole and discuss all options. If you decide to proceed, laser can often be performed the same day. If you prefer a different procedure or choose not to treat it on the day, that’s completely fine — the laser does not have to occur.

Key takeaways

  • Most “normal” moles are harmless and do not require treatment. (1–3)
  • Any mole that is changing, looks different to your others, or has suspicious features should be assessed promptly. (2–4)
  • Cosmetic removal is common — the best method depends on mole type (flat vs raised), location, and your scar preference. (2–5)
  • Laser ablation is often the gold standard cosmetically for suitable benign lesions because it can minimise cutting and reduce the size of the final mark — but it is only appropriate when we are confident the lesion is benign. (2,5)

What is a “harmless mole”?

A harmless mole is typically:

  • evenly coloured (tan/brown/black or skin-coloured)
  • symmetrical
  • stable or slowly changing over many years
  • not persistently bleeding, ulcerating, or rapidly evolving (2–4)

Moles can naturally lighten, become slightly raised, or grow hair over time — this can be normal. (1–3)

If you have “atypical moles” or you’ve been told you have dysplastic naevi, see Dysplastic naevi.

When should a mole be checked?

Book a review if a mole shows any ABCDE changes: (2–4)

  • Asymmetry
  • Border irregularity
  • Colour variation
  • Diameter (especially new/enlarging lesions)
  • Evolving (any change, bleeding, crusting, itch, pain)

If you’re worried a spot could be cancerous, see Skin cancer types and information.

If you’re not sure what a spot is (mole vs “lump/bump” vs sun spot), start at Other Dermatological Conditions.

Cosmetic removal options (pros and cons)

Once a mole is confirmed as benign and suitable for cosmetic treatment, there are three main pathways we use.

1) Surgical excision (cutting it out + stitches)

Best for: moles where complete removal is the priority, deeper moles, or when histology certainty is needed.

Pros

  • Most definitive method
  • Provides tissue for histology when required
  • Lowest chance of recurrence overall (though no method is truly “zero risk”) (2–4)

Cons

  • Leaves a linear scar. A practical rule: the scar is usually at least ~3 times longer than the mole is wide, because the wound needs to be shaped into an ellipse to close neatly.
  • On some body sites (especially legs/chest), scars can stay more noticeable. (2,4)
  • Surgical scars require far more post operative patient care than RF ablation or laser ablation for an excellent cosmetic outcome (eg. taping, gels, potentially limiting activity for 6 weeks – 3 months if wound is on limb).

2) Shave removal + radiofrequency (RF) ablation

Best for: raised, benign moles that protrude and catch on clothing or shaving.

Pros

  • Quick
  • Often excellent for flattening raised moles
  • Usually no stitches
  • RF helps smooth the base and control bleeding (2,4)

Cons

  • Does not always remove the deepest mole cells → small chance of recurrence or residual pigment
  • Leaves a small round/oval mark (often subtle, but depends on skin type and site) (2,4)

3) Laser ablation (cosmetic gold standard for suitable benign lesions)

Best for: cosmetically sensitive areas (often face/neck) and lesions where minimising scarring is the main goal — only when the mole is clearly benign on assessment.

Pros

  • Typically the most cosmetically refined option for suitable lesions
  • Minimises cutting and stitches
  • Often a smaller final mark than excision (2,5)

Cons

  • No full excision specimen (so laser is not used if we need histology certainty)
  • Some lesions may need more than one session depending on depth/pigment
  • Small recurrence risk if residual cells remain (2,5)

For a deeper explanation of our laser platforms, see Laser & Light Treatments hub.

What happens in your appointment

In your 20-minute assessment we:

  • confirm the diagnosis (often with dermoscopy)
  • decide whether the lesion is suitable for cosmetic treatment
  • discuss which method gives the best balance of safety, scar outcome, and recurrence risk
  • outline aftercare and what healing will look like

If you booked the combined assessment + laser session, we only proceed with laser after you’ve had time to ask questions and consent — and you can change your mind on the day.

FAQs

Will removing a mole leave a scar?

Yes — any removal leaves a mark. The goal is choosing the method that gives the best long-term cosmetic outcome for your mole type and body site. (2,4)

What’s the most definitive method?

Surgical excision is the most definitive, with the lowest recurrence risk — but it creates the longest scar. (2,4)

Can any mole be lasered?

No. Laser is reserved for lesions that are confidently benign on assessment. If there is uncertainty, excision and histology is the safer pathway. (2–4)

Book

[Book a 20 minute appointment with Dr Chris] (assessment + options)
[Book a combined appointment: 20 minute assessment + 20 minute laser session] (assessment, then optional same-day laser)

Ivanhoe: Unit 1, 1065 Heidelberg Road, Ivanhoe VIC 3079
Diamond Creek: Shop 12, 67 Main Hurstbridge Road, Diamond Creek VIC 3089

References

1.Cleveland Clinic. Moles (overview; typical number; natural changes). https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/4416-moles

2.DermNet NZ. Melanocytic naevus (mole) overview. https://dermnetnz.org/topics/melanocytic-naevus

3.Australasian College of Dermatologists. Moles / melanocytic naevi. https://www.dermcoll.edu.au/atoz/moles-melanocytic-naevi/

4.American Academy of Dermatology. ABCDE warning signs. https://www.aad.org/public/diseases/skin-cancer/find/at-risk/abcdes

5.British Association of Dermatologists. Moles (melanocytic naevi) patient leaflet. https://www.skinhealthinfo.org.uk/condition/moles-melanocytic-naevi/