Many patients with maxillofacial trauma fracture are worried about the “broken face” after the open reduction surgery for the fracture, so they are hesitant about the surgical treatment and miss the best time for treatment. Therefore, we would like to answer the question of whether jaw fracture surgery will “break the face”. Jaw fracture surgery has been improved by several generations of medical practitioners, and now this type of surgery basically does not have the problem of broken face. Because the design of the incision for jaw fracture surgery has been improved to meet the aesthetic requirements, countless healed patients have maintained a better appearance. Commonly used surgical incisions for maxillofacial fractures include: oral vestibular sulcus incision, submandibular incision, preauricular incision, and coronal incision. An oral vestibular groove incision, as the name suggests, is an incision designed in the mucous membrane of the mouth that does not leave scarring on the facial skin. The submandibular incision is an incision designed along 1.5 centimeters from the lower border of the mandible and is typically used for fractures of the angle of the mandible, ascending mandibular branch, and the base of the condyle. The incision is hidden in the area where the jawbone meets the neck and is not visible to the patient when viewed from the front, so it does not “break” the face. The preauricular incision is a surgical incision for condylar fractures along the preauricular fold. The scarring of this type of incision follows the preauricular fold and is not visible from the patient’s front. A coronal incision is a surgical incision within the hairline (the incision is made in the area of hair distribution), and the scalp scar will be covered by the hair after the surgery, so it will not “break” the face of the patient. In addition to rational incision design to minimize postoperative cosmetic effects, we also use a full range of scar control techniques to minimize postoperative scarring and achieve the best possible results. For facial skin tears directly caused by trauma, our department can also minimize scar formation by means of cosmetic suturing, wound care, and scar inhibiting drugs. We would like to remind you that the earlier the trauma is treated with specialized treatment, the better the recovery will be.