Instant Plastic Surgery

In the real world, plastic surgery is a long and painful process, with clearly-defined limits on what can be accomplished. Thankfully, in a magical, or sufficiently futuristic setting, things are a lot more simplified; all you need is the right spell, artefact, or professional, and minutes later you can be taller, prettier, or a fully-fledged member of the opposite sex. Heck, why not all three?

A popular trope in video-games and high fantasy, where often the only limit to these fantastical transformations is the inability to swap races, and sometimes not even then.

When used to change a character's sex, this is a form of Easy Sex Change. Not to be confused with Magic Plastic Surgery, which is when real plastic surgery techniques are portrayed as this.

Anime and Manga

 * Subverted in Code Name Sailor V. The Dark Agency's latest plot is to get the city addicted to fattening chocolates, and then lure the victims to a spa where "weight loss pods" will make them thin again. The pods just drain their energy and the spa uses funhouse mirrors to make the patrons look like they lost weight. Minako avoids this because Artemis confiscates her chocolates and makes her lift weights for several days. Even her healing powers can't make everyone lose the extra pounds; they have to all put in the work to remove it.
 * In Ultra Maniac, Nina reveals that different spells can achieve this goal. She can change herself or anyone else of the opposite gender, make them taller and prettier, and so forth. The hitch is you need the counterspell to reverse the effects. If you don't have it ready? Nina has to spend hours finding it on her computer.
 * Sailor Moon
 * The Disguise Pen can sometimes accomplish this, though it helps that it can summon heels to make the girls look taller or give them a shorter cut which wears off as soon as they transform into Senshi.
 * Similar to the Sailor V manga, Jadeite ran a gym for a few weeks. Unlike in the manga, he brainwashed real exercise instructors to put the guests through rigorous routines, and only then would they use the energy-draining pods after finishing their workouts. The moral ambiguity, energy-stealing aside, is when Usagi and her friends, who are minors, are put to the same routines rather than adjusting to their growing bodies. Luna makes Sailor Moon intervene when Ms. Haruna is using the pods so much that she's on the verge of dying.
 * The anime has the Starlights changing gender when they transform into Senshi. One could interpret them as genderfluid, while in the manga it's mentioned they only dress as boys to hide their identity from whoever kidnapped their leader Kakyuu.

Comic Books

 * In Sandman, it's shown that the Endless can alter their appearance as they see fit, complete with hairstyle or skin changes. Delirium rarely wears the same outfit or look twice; in some cases she may even appear taller than before, depending on how she hunches. Death would rather be in her standard tank, but if asked to dress formally, she will show off her wardrobe.

Fan Works

 * A great number of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time fan works are based on Zelda's disguise being this, rather than simply an illusion spell of some kind.

Film

 * The Happily Ever After potion in Shrek 2 is able to transform Shrek and Fiona into humans, and Donkey into a stallion. Only lasts for a day, unless sealed with true love's kiss by the stroke of midnight..
 * What happens to Dragon under the effect of this potion anyway?
 * Played for horror in Disney's Snow White. When the mirror reveals to the Queen that the Hunter faked Snow White's death and reveals her location, the Queen storms to her private potion chambers. She makes a potion that would give her a harmless peddler's appearance so that no one will recognize her as she goes to murder her stepdaughter personally. It requires a hag's cackle, mummy dust, black of night, a scream of fright, a blast of wind, and a thunderbolt. The resulting effects make her look terrifying, and the potion itself causes great pain to the queen. This plan is so complicated that a few viewers asked why not make a potion that would make her more beautiful than Snow White.

Literature

 * In The Belles, Belles are supposed to have this power. They can shapeshift different looks on any paying customer. The Big Bad Sophia, spare to the New Orleans throne, finds this power intriguing and wants to control it all. Why?.
 * Aza in Gail Carson Levine's Fairest gets it in her head to try and find these in the Ayorthian libraries. She hates how she's tall with pale skin, red lips and black hair; it makes her look ghastly. The first attempt, a singing spell, doesn't go well; it nearly turns her to stone. While her body revives, her big toe remains stone as a reminder of the near-miss..
 * Justified in Scott Westerfeld's original Uglies trilogy. While the surgeries themselves are not necessarily easy to get-- they do require anesthetic and have to make adjustments-- they are more convenient than they would be in real life. Books two and three start with Tally suffering no physical complications from . Emotional complications, however, are another matter: . We also find out that surgeries have more complications when performed on people with brain damage, because there's a high risk of the tissues being rejected..

Live-Action TV

 * The Twilight Zone episode "Number 12 Looks Just Like You" explains there is a process called The Transformation. It will make anyone beautiful from a limited set of body types and looks, and extend their lifespan. Marilyn, the protagonist who is "pretty" but not beautiful, shocks her family and the doctor wanting to operate her by saying that she doesn't want to look beautiful. She says that she wants to stay as herself, in mind and body.

Oral Tradition, Folklore, Myths and Legends

 * In The Mahabharata, Arjuna is cursed to be a eunuch for one year, but he can choose when to serve that sentence. When Duryodhana is hunting him and his brothers down, he thinks it's a good time to activate the curse. After the year is up, he reverts to normal.
 * Subverted in the tale of The Story of Tấm and Cám, which some Western readers may refer to as the Vietnamese Cinderella. It follows the Cinderella tale, up to the part where Tấm returns home to pay respects to her dead father. As she undergoes preparations, her stepfamily murders her. After a series of Tấm's reincarnations, including when she becomes a bird, peach trees, and a golden apple tree, she comes back to life, still beautiful as before. Tấm reunites with her husband, as her stepsister Cám asks how the former retains her youth and beauty. Tấm reveals that she boils herself in boiling water or sesame oil every night to peel off her skin. Either she "helps" Cam with this step, using her royal authority to get this revenge, or Cám is stupid enough to step into a boiling pot. The boiling water or oil kills Cám instantly.
 * In "Strong Wind," a Native American version of Cinderella, it plays out a little differently. The Cinderella figure, the youngest of her chief father's daughters, is scarred by her sisters, not her stepsisters, out of pure spite and cruelty. They cut her hair into jagged streaks and press red-hot coals to her face. She goes to see Strong Wind, a magical warrior seeking an honest woman for a bride because he believes someone who would lie to be with a prospect is not worthy. Because she is the only one who answers honestly that she cannot see him, Strong Wind reveals himself to her and says that she passed the test. He then heals her scars and grows her hair back. As punishment to her sisters for being bullies, however, he turns them into trees.

Tabletop Games

 * In Vampire: The Masquerade, this is but one of the many, many miraculous wonders the Tzimisce are capable of through their unique power of Vicissitude. Laughably, raising your Appearance score using the power is Difficulty 10 (in OWOD, Difficulty is what you have to roll to succeed; the game uses a ten-sided die, so...), and if you suffer Critical Failure you get uglier.
 * There are some things that even Vicissitude can't do—trying to change a Nosferatu's appearance is impossible.
 * Changes that make them prettier, anyway. Changes that make them uglier, or cosmetically status quo (don't move their appearance trait at all) stick, while improvements 'heal' painfully in minutes. Makes sense considering Clan weaknesses are a malevolent curse rather than a genetic quirk to be fixed.

Video Games

 * Once you craft a make-up table and mirror in Animal Crossing: New Horizons, you are free to alter your appearance in it at any time.
 * City of Heroes: Thanks to the good people at Icon (or the somewhat less morally inclined folk employed by the Facemaker), heroes and villains can easily change the size and shape of their bodies, even switch genders. Of course, in a world where there is a black market for magical artifacts and super science is used daily, this is pretty well Justified.  During the game's original run this was only available to those players who had purchased the Super Science Super Booster, but with the game's resurrection in 2019 has become available to all.
 * This is the in-universe excuse for Shepard's appearance if you change it between Mass Effect 1 and Mass Effect 2; s/he died in the interim and had to be completely rebuilt.
 * Star Wars The Old Republic has "Appearance Designer Kiosk's" that can provide this service, provided you have enough Cartel Coins.
 * World of Warcraft barbers can change your gender, hair, facial features, and skin colour.
 * Galathil from Skyrim offers this service for an affordable price down in The Ragged Flagon.
 * In the world of Elden Ring, one need only approach the Clouded Mirror Stand to change your age, gender, or any other cosmetic features of your character.
 * You can build a "Dressing Table" (which is a mirror attached to a small storage desk) after the first chunk of Dragon Quest Builders 2. It actually gives significantly more options than initial character customization offered, and allows setting any armor or weapon you've obtained as your appearance instead what you actually have equipped..

Western Animation

 * An episode of Adventures from the Book of Virtues features an adaptation of "The Indian Cinderella," to convince Zach to come clean about breaking his father's camera. In this version, Cinderella is named Morning Light, a beautiful young woman who is not afraid to tell the truth when necessary, or do work. She's a candidate to meet Strong Wind, a magical warrior that can turn invisible. Out of spite, her sisters wear masks at night, cut her hair and scar her. Unlike in the original fairy tale, her father goes Papa Wolf and promises to punish the attackers after seeing Morning Light run off in tears. She figures out it was her sisters because they didn't think to take off their jewels, and exposes them to her father. He grounds and punishes them, as Morning Light goes to see Strong Wind with her scarred face and jagged hair. When she passes the test by honestly saying that she doesn't see him in the sky, until he reveals himself, he uses magic to grow her hair back and heal her scars.
 * In The Owl House, one can use illusion bracelets to obtain this effect. Remove the bracelet and the illusion vanishes. It's revealed that the Blight parents make Edric and Emira wear them, and.
 * One gag in What's New, Scooby-Doo? showed the gang visiting an amusement park of innovations. Daphne jokingly pushes Velma into a high-tech makeover machine. Velma steps out in five seconds with makeup, her turtleneck turned into a tank, and stylish platforms. The machine does nothing to Daphne, who says there's no improving on perfection.

Real Life

 * A great makeup artist or stylist can change a customer's appearance radically. It may come down to the hair, contours, and some well-placed silicone.