LASIK Eye Surgery Patient Journey Timeline: Consultation to Final Results
A week-by-week timeline for LASIK eye surgery patients covering initial consultation, pre-op preparation, procedure day, recovery milestones, and follow-up schedule in Istanbul.
Content is educational and planning-oriented. It does not replace diagnosis, treatment, or personalized medical advice from a licensed healthcare professional. Outcomes vary by individual case.
Introduction — Understanding the LASIK Patient Journey
If you are considering LASIK eye surgery — whether at a local clinic or as a medical tourist traveling to Istanbul — understanding the full patient journey is essential for making an informed decision and planning your logistics realistically. LASIK is one of the most studied elective procedures in ophthalmology, with 95.4% of patients reporting satisfaction with their results across a large global sample. But high satisfaction does not mean a risk-free, instantaneous process. The LASIK patient journey spans from your first pre-operative evaluation through months of recovery and follow-up, and being prepared for each phase can make a meaningful difference in your experience and outcomes.
This guide is built for patients who are evaluating LASIK as a vision correction option. You will find a detailed, week-by-week breakdown of what to expect before, during, and after surgery, supported by clinical evidence from peer-reviewed literature and major health authorities. The guide also includes a dedicated section for medical tourists traveling to Istanbul, covering the specific logistics, minimum stay requirements, and follow-up planning that undergoing refractive surgery in Turkey entails.
For an introduction to the LASIK procedure itself — how it works, who it is designed for, and the core technology involved — refer to our LASIK Foundation 101 resource. For a broader view of all eye surgery options available, see the Eye Surgery Overview.
What Is the LASIK Patient Journey?
The LASIK patient journey is the chronological arc of your experience with refractive surgery, beginning weeks before your procedure and extending up to a year or more afterward. It is not simply "the day of surgery." The journey includes:
Pre-operative preparation (weeks to days before): testing, contact lens cessation, medication review, logistics planning
Procedure day (Day 0): what happens at the clinic, how long it takes, what you may experience immediately after
Early recovery (Days 1–7): the critical initial healing window with activity restrictions, drop regimens, and first follow-up visits
Short-term recovery (Weeks 2–4): visual stabilization, dry eye management, return to most daily activities
Stabilization period (Months 2–6): when vision settles into its final prescription, when enhancement decisions can be considered
Long-term outcomes (Months 6–12+): final visual results, long-term eye protection, and ongoing care
While the active laser time during LASIK is only 10–60 seconds per eye, full visual stabilization can take three to six months. Planning for this timeline — rather than expecting instant results — is one of the most important things you can do as a patient.
Who Is This Guide For?
This guide is written for:
Patients considering LASIK for myopia, hyperopia, or astigmatism who want a realistic understanding of the recovery process before committing
International patients planning to have LASIK in Istanbul who need specific logistics guidance for medical tourism (accommodation timing, follow-up across borders, surgeon verification)
Readers who have already had an initial consultation and are preparing for surgery, seeking a detailed reference for each phase
If you are earlier in your research and want to understand whether LASIK is right for you — including candidacy criteria and contraindications — our LASIK Foundation 101 and the LASIK Treatment page provide that foundational overview.
How to Use This Guide
This guide is organized in chronological phases that mirror the actual patient experience. You can read it straight through or jump to the phase relevant to where you are in your journey. Warning signs and red-flag symptoms are marked with callout boxes throughout, as these require immediate in-person review regardless of where you are in the process.
For Istanbul-specific logistics — including minimum stay requirements, surgeon verification, and emergency communication planning — see Phase 7 — Practical Guidance for Medical Tourists at the end of this guide.
Key takeaways
LASIK has >95% patient satisfaction and >99% achieve 20/40 or better vision
Recovery is fast: most patients return to normal activities within 2–3 days
Dry eye is the most common side effect but typically resolves within months
Serious complications are rare but require immediate attention when they occur
Plan a minimum 5–7 day stay in Istanbul if having surgery abroad
Choose a JCI-accredited clinic with an experienced surgeon
Educational information only
This content is general education and does not replace evaluation by a licensed clinician. If you have symptoms, complications, or urgent concerns, seek in-person medical care.
Phase 1 — Pre-Departure Preparation (Weeks to Days Before Surgery)
The weeks before your LASIK procedure are not just waiting time — they are an active preparation period that directly affects surgical accuracy and post-operative outcomes. Arriving at the clinic with an optimized ocular surface, accurate measurements, and all logistics confirmed can reduce anxiety and may improve results. This phase typically begins 2–4 weeks before your planned surgery date, though the timeline may be longer if you wear hard contact lenses.
Schedule and Pre-Operative Testing
Your pre-operative evaluation is the most important appointment before surgery. The measurements taken during this visit directly determine your surgical plan — the amount of corneal tissue to be reshaped, the laser programming, and the expected outcomes. Inaccurate measurements from a reshaped cornea (caused by contact lens wear) can lead to suboptimal results, which is why the contact lens cessation timeline exists.
Contact lens cessation requirements are based on how long different lens types take to fully reshape the cornea:
The reason contact lenses must be stopped is straightforward: they physically reshape the cornea. When you stop wearing them, the cornea gradually returns to its natural shape over days to weeks. If a surgeon measures your eye while the cornea is still reshaped by a lens, the surgical plan will be based on inaccurate data. The FDA surgery checklist explicitly notes this risk.
The pre-operative evaluation itself typically includes multiple tests: manifest refraction (the standard vision test you are familiar with), cycloplegic refraction (using eye drops to temporarily paralyze the focusing muscle for a more accurate measurement), corneal topography and tomography (mapping the corneal surface shape in detail), pupillometry (measuring your pupil size in different lighting conditions), a slit-lamp exam (examining the front structures of the eye under magnification), and a dilated fundus exam (examining the retina after the pupil is dilated). These tests together give your surgeon a complete picture of your eye health and refractive error.
Contact Lens Cessation Tip
Stop soft lenses 2 weeks before baseline evaluation; toric soft or RGP lenses 3 weeks before; hard (PMMA) lenses 4 weeks before. Contact lenses reshape the cornea and can lead to inaccurate surgical plans. If you are unsure whether your lenses have fully stabilized, ask your clinic to confirm before scheduling your pre-op evaluation.
Medication and Supplement Review
Before LASIK, you should provide your surgeon with a complete list of all medications you are taking — including prescription drugs, over-the-counter medications, and supplements. Certain medications can affect corneal healing, refractive stability, or dry eye severity.
Of particular note:
Isotretinoin (Accutane) and other systemic retinoids: these medications can affect corneal epithelial healing and are generally a contraindication for LASIK. Inform your surgeon if you are taking any retinoid medications.
Hormonal therapies affecting refractive stability: some hormone replacement therapies, oral contraceptives, or other treatments may cause fluctuations in refraction that could affect surgical planning.
Immunosuppressive medications: medications that suppress immune function can affect post-operative healing and infection risk. Discuss any immunosuppressant therapy with your surgeon.
Your surgeon will advise you on which medications to pause or adjust before surgery. Do not stop taking prescription medications without explicit instruction from your prescribing physician.
Ocular Surface Optimization — Dry Eye Treatment Before Surgery
Pre-existing dry eye is one of the most important factors to address before LASIK. Not only can dry eye affect the accuracy of pre-operative measurements, but it can also significantly worsen post-operative discomfort and delay recovery. The Mayo Clinic notes that moderate-to-severe dry eye may be a relative contraindication for LASIK, meaning surgery may be delayed or alternative procedures considered.
If you have dry eye symptoms before surgery — burning, gritty sensation, fluctuating vision, excess tearing — discuss pre-operative treatment with your surgeon. Common pre-operative optimization strategies include:
Preservative-free artificial tears: used frequently in the weeks before surgery to improve the ocular surface
Punctal plugs: small devices placed in the tear drainage openings to increase tear film volume on the eye surface
Warm compresses: may help improve meibomian gland function and tear quality
Omega-3 fatty acid supplements: some studies suggest these may support ocular surface health, though evidence is mixed
Treating dry eye before surgery rather than waiting until after is one of the clearest examples of pre-operative optimization making a meaningful difference in patient experience.
The Day Before Surgery — Precautions
On the day before your procedure, several practical steps help ensure the surgery goes smoothly and the corneal flap is not compromised:
Stop using creams, lotions, makeup, and perfumes around the eye area. These substances can leave residues that interfere with the laser or increase infection risk. This includes eye makeup, face creams applied near the eyes, perfumes, and hairspray. The FDA surgery checklist specifically notes this requirement.
Arrange transportation to and from the clinic. You cannot drive immediately after LASIK — numbing drops wear off within hours but your vision may still be fluctuating, and the eye shield worn immediately after surgery makes driving impossible. Arrange for a companion to drive you or use pre-arranged clinic transport.
Confirm your schedule for the first 24–48 hours. Plan to rest with closed eyes for at least the first 4 hours after arriving home. Avoid any commitments that require visual focus (driving, screen work, reading) for the first 12–24 hours.
Confirm any clinic transfer arrangements if you are a medical tourist. If your Istanbul clinic offers airport pick-up or hotel-to-clinic transfer, confirm these logistics in advance. Your accommodation should be within a reasonable travel distance of the clinic for the follow-up visits you will attend in the first week.
Questions to Ask Your Surgeon Before Surgery
Before committing to LASIK, you deserve clear answers from your surgeon about their experience, the technology they use, and their approach to follow-up and complications. Recommended questions include:
What laser platform will be used? Different laser systems (e.g., femtosecond laser for flap creation, excimer laser for ablation) have different performance characteristics. Top-tier clinics in Istanbul typically use internationally recognized platforms.
Will you personally perform both the flap creation and the laser ablation? In some teaching institutions, parts of the procedure may be delegated. Confirm that your named surgeon performs the entire procedure.
What is your personal enhancement (retreatment) rate? Enhancement rates vary by surgeon experience, laser platform, and patient population. A rate of approximately 1–2% within the first year is considered normal in the field, but your surgeon should have individualized data.
What is the post-operative follow-up schedule? Confirm how many visits are included, at what intervals, and what happens if you need to be seen urgently.
Who do I contact after hours if I have a problem? Verify that there is a direct line (phone, WhatsApp, or email) to reach the medical team for post-operative concerns, not just a general reception.
What credentials should I verify when choosing a LASIK clinic? Look for JCI (Joint Commission International) accreditation, which is the global gold standard for hospital safety and quality. Turkish Health Ministry certification is another relevant indicator. Review the LASIK Facility Audit Checklist for a detailed verification framework.
If you are evaluating LASIK clinics in Istanbul specifically, also ask whether the surgeon performs high volumes of LASIK procedures (experience matters), what their protocol is for medical tourists who have returned home and experience delayed complications, and whether they provide written post-operative instructions in your language.
Phase 2 — Procedure Day (Day 0)
Understanding what happens on the day of surgery can significantly reduce anxiety. LASIK is an outpatient procedure — you arrive at the clinic, undergo the procedure, and leave within a few hours. There is no overnight stay required. Knowing what to expect also helps you recognize what is normal versus what may be a warning sign in the hours immediately after surgery.
How Long Does LASIK Take?
One of the most frequently asked questions is how long the procedure takes. The total time at the clinic is approximately 30 minutes, though this includes preparation and post-procedure rest. The actual laser application is only 10–60 seconds per eye. Both eyes are typically treated in the same session. The procedure is so rapid that many patients are surprised by how quickly they are finished.
What Happens Step by Step
The LASIK procedure follows a consistent sequence:
Preparation: Your eye is numbed with topical anesthetic drops. The area around your eye is cleaned. A small speculum is placed between your eyelids to hold them open — you will not be able to blink or close your eye during the procedure.
Flap creation: The femtosecond laser creates a thin, precise corneal flap. During this step, you will feel pressure on your eye and your vision will dim or go dark briefly. This is normal and lasts approximately 20–30 seconds per eye.
Laser correction: The surgeon gently repositions the corneal flap and the excimer laser is applied to reshape the corneal tissue. You will be asked to stare at a fixed blinking light. You may hear a ticking sound from the laser and possibly notice a slight smell from the laser interaction with tissue — this is normal.
Flap repositioning: The surgeon smooths the flap back into place. No stitches are used — the flap adheres naturally through the eye's own healing response.
Shield placement: A transparent protective shield is placed over your eye. This prevents accidental contact with the flap in the immediate hours after surgery.
The entire process from entering the laser suite to exiting is typically under 15 minutes of active treatment time.
Will It Hurt?
The numbing drops eliminate pain during the procedure itself — you will not feel the laser or the flap creation. After the numbing drops wear off (within the first couple of hours after surgery), mild discomfort is common: burning, itching, a feeling like something is in your eye (foreign-body sensation). Most patients describe this as uncomfortable but not painful. The discomfort typically peaks at around 2–4 hours after the procedure and resolves substantially by the next morning.
What You May Experience Immediately After
When you leave the clinic after LASIK, you should expect the following in the first hours:
Burning, itching, or foreign-body sensation: peaks at 2–4 hours, gradually eases
Watering or tearing: common as the eye responds to surgery
Sensitivity to light (photophobia): sunglasses help; keep them nearby
Blurry vision: this is normal immediately after surgery and gradually clears. Many patients notice their vision is noticeably better within the first few hours even though it may fluctuate.
Redness or bloodshot appearance: the white of the eye may appear red; this is temporary and related to the suction used during flap creation
These symptoms are all within the normal range. What is not normal — and requires immediate contact with your surgeon — is covered in the red flags section below.
Red Flags — Contact Your Surgeon Immediately
Severe pain not relieved by over-the-counter medication, vision that worsens after initial improvement, sudden increase in floaters or flashes of light, a shadow or curtain over vision, or any indication that the flap has been dislodged. If you experience these symptoms, contact your surgeon or go to an emergency department immediately.
Phase 3 — Recovery Days 1–3: The Initial Healing Window
The first 72 hours after LASIK are the most critical period for the corneal flap. The flap is most vulnerable to displacement during this window, and the ocular surface is actively healing. Your adherence to post-operative instructions during these three days has a meaningful effect on outcomes.
Day 1 — First Post-Op Visit (24–48 Hours)
Your first follow-up appointment is scheduled for 24–48 hours after surgery. This visit is mandatory — do not skip it. At this appointment, your surgeon will:
Remove the protective eye shield and examine the flap
Test your uncorrected visual acuity (UDVA)
Examine the cornea under a slit-lamp to confirm proper healing
Assess for early signs of complications (infection, flap wrinkles, debris under the flap)
If you are a medical tourist in Istanbul, this is why a minimum 5–7 day stay is required — you need to be present for the Day 1 visit and ideally the Day 3–5 visit before traveling home. The LASIK Travel Logistics resource covers this in more detail.
Visual Recovery on Day 1
Most patients are surprised to find that their vision is already noticeably better by the morning after surgery. Many patients achieve 20/20 or close to it by the first post-operative visit. However, this does not mean vision is fully stable. Fluctuations between clear and hazy vision are normal in the first few days and are primarily driven by:
Dryness: the most significant driver of visual fluctuation in early recovery. The corneal nerves that regulate tear production were interrupted during flap creation; until those nerves regenerate, dryness and corresponding vision fluctuation are expected.
Corneal edema: minor swelling of the cornea from the laser application, which resolves over days
Epithelial healing: the thin layer of cells on the corneal surface is healing
Frequent use of preservative-free artificial tears — every 1–2 hours when awake in the first week — can significantly reduce visual fluctuation. Do not skip the drops even if your vision seems clear.
Managing Discomfort in Days 1–3
The peak discomfort period is the first 4 hours after surgery (described above). By Day 1–2, most patients report that the burning and itching have subsided considerably. To support comfort during this window:
Use prescribed eye drops as directed: your surgeon will prescribe a combination of antibiotic drops (to prevent infection) and steroid drops (to control inflammation) for the first week. Follow the schedule precisely.
Use artificial tears frequently: every 1–2 hours when awake, even if your vision seems fine. Artificial tears support epithelial healing and reduce visual fluctuation.
Do not rub your eyes: even gentle pressure can dislodge the flap. This warning is especially important in the first few days. If you have itching, use cold artificial tears or ask your surgeon for a compatible eye drop for relief.
Wear the eye shield at night: this prevents accidental rubbing while you sleep. Most surgeons recommend wearing it for the first 3–5 nights.
Avoid eye makeup: even remnants from makeup remover can introduce bacteria to the healing ocular surface.
Eye Rubbing Warning
Do not rub your eyes — even gentle pressure can dislodge the flap, especially in the first few days after surgery. If you experience itching, use artificial tears for relief rather than rubbing. Sleeping with the protective eye shield on is strongly recommended.
Activity Restrictions — Days 1–3
During the first 1–3 days after LASIK:
Rest with closed eyes for the first 4 hours when you return home after surgery
Light activity is permitted after the initial rest period — moving around the house, going to the Day 1 follow-up appointment
Avoid strenuous exercise — heavy lifting, intense cardio, or anything that significantly increases intraocular pressure
No driving until your surgeon confirms your vision meets the legal driving standard at the Day 1 visit. Most patients are cleared to drive by Day 1–2, depending on their clinic's protocol and local requirements.
Avoid reading, computer work, and TV for the first 12–24 hours. If you must use a screen, use artificial tears frequently and take breaks.
Keep activities minimal if you are a medical tourist — rest in your accommodation between follow-up visits rather than touring the city.
Phase 4 — Recovery Days 4–7: First Full Week
By the end of the first week, most patients have made the transition from acute recovery to functional daily life. Many return to non-strenuous work during this window. However, the corneal flap is still healing and certain activities remain restricted.
Visual Progress at Day 5–7
By the end of the first week, most patients see well enough to resume non-strenuous work. Some patients may still have mild visual fluctuation and dryness — this is within the normal range for this stage. Visual clarity typically continues to improve through Week 2 and beyond as the cornea heals and dryness resolves.
At the Week 1 follow-up visit, your surgeon will assess your corneal healing, confirm flap stability, and advise when you can return to specific activities. If you have questions about your specific healing trajectory, this is the time to ask.
Activity Restrictions — Week 1
The following table summarizes activity restrictions during Week 1. These guidelines are based on multiple recovery timelines and should be confirmed with your own surgeon, who knows your individual case.
Feature
Activity
Guidance
Light exercise (walking)
Permitted from Day 1–3
Swimming, hot tubs, saunas
Avoid for at least 2 weeks
Eye makeup
Avoid for 2 weeks
Contact sports (boxing, football)
Avoid for at least 4 weeks
Strenuous exercises
Avoid for 1–2 weeks
Computer work
May resume within 1–3 days with artificial tears
Driving at night
Avoid until cleared by surgeon
Corneal Healing and Flap Adherence
Understanding how the flap heals is important for long-term protection. The corneal flap adheres through a process called epithelialization and early stromal healing. It never fully heals biomechanically — meaning the interface between the flap and the underlying cornea is always a potential plane of weakness, even years after surgery. This does not mean LASIK is unsafe for normal daily activities. It does mean:
Avoid eye rubbing long-term — habitual eye rubbing could theoretically dislodge a flap even years later, though this is rare
Wear protective eyewear during high-risk activities — contact sports, woodworking, or any activity where a projectile could strike the eye
Inform all healthcare providers — any eye surgery or procedure performed in the future, your surgeon should know you have had LASIK with a corneal flap
This is a permanent consideration for the rest of your life after LASIK, not just the recovery period.
Seek Urgent Review If
Persistent or worsening pain, vision that was good and then suddenly worsens, any indication the flap has been disturbed, or signs of infection (increasing redness, discharge, or fever). These symptoms require in-person examination, not phone consultation alone.
Phase 5 — Weeks 2–4: Short-Term Recovery
By Weeks 2–4, most patients are back to the majority of their normal activities with minimal restrictions. The cornea has passed the most vulnerable phase of flap healing, but epithelial and nerve regeneration are still ongoing. Dry eye and night vision symptoms are the two areas that typically require the most attention during this period.
What to Expect at the 2-Week Follow-Up
At the 2-week follow-up, your surgeon will assess your uncorrected distance visual acuity (UDVA), best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA), corneal topography (to confirm the corneal shape is as intended), flap status, and dry eye evaluation. Most patients are released to resume most activities at 2 weeks, with surgeon confirmation on specific items like eye makeup or swimming.
If you are experiencing significant visual disturbances at the 2-week mark, discuss this with your surgeon at the follow-up visit. In most cases, what seems concerning at 2 weeks has not yet had time to improve and is still within the expected healing trajectory.
Dry Eye — Ongoing Management
Dry eye is the most common post-operative side effect of LASIK, and the FDA PROWL study found that approximately 28% of patients developed new dry eye symptoms at 3 months that were not present before surgery. However, the same study and long-term data show that dry eye symptoms generally improve over time. At 12 months, the average dry eye symptom score has improved substantially compared to 1 month.
The keys to managing dry eye in Weeks 2–4:
Dry Eye Management Tip
Use artificial tears frequently — every 1–2 hours when awake in early recovery. Discuss prescription options with your surgeon if over-the-counter tears are insufficient. Some patients benefit from prescription dry eye medications (e.g., cyclosporine or lifitegrast drops) during this period.
Some patients — particularly those with higher preoperative prescriptions — may experience persistent dry eye that requires ongoing treatment beyond the first few months. If your dry eye is severe or not improving as expected, ask your surgeon about additional options.
Night Vision and Glare — Weeks 2–4
Night vision symptoms — halos (rings of light around sources), glare (difficulty seeing in bright light), and starbursts — are a known consequence of LASIK that is more noticeable in low-light conditions. These occur because the corneal flap creates a slightly different optical surface than the untouched cornea, and because pupil dilation in low light exposes areas of the cornea that may have been treated differently than the center.
The FDA PROWL study found that up to 40% of patients who had no halos before surgery developed halos at 3 months. Less than 1% of patients reported severe difficulty performing usual activities due to visual symptoms.
Most patients report significant improvement by Month 3. If you are experiencing severe night vision symptoms at 1 month, discuss this with your surgeon — they may recommend additional testing or suggest that the symptoms simply need more time to resolve.
Phase 6 — Months 2–6: Stabilization Period
The period from Month 2 through Month 6 is when your vision stabilizes into its final result and when decisions about enhancement (retreatment) surgery can first be considered. During this phase, subtle fluctuations in vision are still possible and minor adjustments in prescription may occur as the cornea fully remodels.
Vision Stabilization Timeline
Most patients reach their best corrected vision by Month 3–6. The FDA notes that it may take three to six months for vision to fully stabilize after LASIK. Some patients continue to notice subtle improvements even beyond Month 6. This is the range of normal healing, and you should not be alarmed if your vision continues to change slightly during this period.
During these months, it is important to attend all scheduled follow-up appointments even if your vision feels stable. Your surgeon tracks the trajectory of your healing, which informs whether any intervention (such as enhancement) may be needed.
When Enhancement (Retreatment) May Be Considered
An enhancement (also called retreatment or touch-up) is a second laser procedure to refine the outcome if the initial result is under- or over-corrected, or if regression occurs. Enhancement rates are approximately 1–2% within the first year and approximately 1% per year thereafter. In properly selected patients, these rates are considered a normal part of the refractive surgery spectrum — not a failure.
Enhancement surgery is considered when:
The manifest refraction is stable across two consecutive visits at least 3 months apart
The corneal thickness allows for safe additional ablation (this is measured during pre-operative testing)
The patient is dissatisfied with the outcome and understands the risks and benefits
Your surgeon will not typically offer enhancement before vision has stabilized, as operating too early can lead to over-correction or other complications. If you feel your results are not meeting expectations at 3 months, bring this up at your follow-up visit — your surgeon can explain the expected trajectory and whether enhancement is appropriate for your situation.
Quality of Life Data During Stabilization Period
The FDA PROWL study provides important context for what to expect during the stabilization period:
Up to 46% of patients who had no visual symptoms before surgery developed at least one new visual symptom at 3 months
The most common new symptom: halos (up to 40% at 3 months in patients with no pre-operative halos)
Less than 1% of patients reported "a lot of difficulty" or inability to perform usual activities due to any single visual symptom
More than 95% of patients reported being satisfied with their vision at 3 months and beyond
This data set is important for expectation-setting: developing new visual symptoms in the first few months is not uncommon, but severe functional impairment from those symptoms is rare. Most symptoms improve significantly by Month 6 and continue to do so through Month 12.
Long-Term Safety Data
The long-term safety profile of LASIK is supported by studies with extended follow-up. A 12-year follow-up study of LASIK for moderate myopia found good safety and stability over the observation period. Key findings included:
No patient lost more than two lines of best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA)
Biomechanical stability was maintained over the long term
No evidence of late-onset ectasia (a rare complication involving progressive corneal thinning and bulge formation) in properly selected patients
This long-term data is reassuring for patients concerned that LASIK results do not last or that complications may emerge years later. For properly screened candidates, LASIK is considered a durable, stable procedure.
Phase 7 — Months 6–12: Final Outcomes and Long-Term Outlook
By the end of the first year, most LASIK patients have reached their final visual outcome. The numbers from major studies give a clear picture of what is typical for properly performed LASIK in appropriately selected patients.
Expected Visual Outcomes at 6–12 Months
Based on peer-reviewed outcomes data from a study of 254 eyes treated with modern laser platforms:
Mean postoperative spherical equivalent: approximately −0.14 diopters (very close to zero, indicating near-perfect correction)
Predictability: 91.3% within ±0.50 diopters of intended correction; 98.5% within ±1.00 diopters
Safety: no eyes lost more than two lines of BCVA at 12 months
These numbers represent modern LASIK with current-generation laser platforms. Outcomes may vary based on individual factors (prescription, corneal thickness, pupil size, age) and your surgeon should give you personalized expectations based on your pre-operative measurements.
Long-Term Dry Eye Outlook
For most patients, dry eye symptoms continue to improve through Month 12. The average dry eye symptom score at 12 months is meaningfully lower than at 1 month. A minority of patients may have persistent dry eye beyond 12 months, particularly those who had pre-existing dry eye before surgery.
If you entered surgery with pre-existing dry eye, this is one of the areas your surgeon should have discussed as a long-term management consideration, not just a pre-operative optimization step. Ask your surgeon what long-term dry eye management plan they recommend if this applies to you.
Long-Term Eye Protection Considerations
Two long-term eye protection considerations are relevant for all LASIK patients:
The LASIK flap never fully biomechanically heals. The interface between the flap and the underlying stroma is a permanent potential plane of weakness. This does not mean the flap will dislodge during normal daily activities — it will not. But in the event of significant blunt trauma to the eye (e.g., from a steering wheel in a car accident, a ball striking the eye during sports), the flap could theoretically be displaced. For this reason:
Inform all future eye care providers that you have had LASIK. Any intraocular eye surgery requires this information.
Annual comprehensive eye exams are recommended regardless of LASIK history. LASIK corrects your prescription at the time of surgery, but your eyes continue to change with age. Cataracts, glaucoma, retinal changes, and other age-related conditions can develop and should be monitored through annual exams. Your LASIK history should be part of the record at every eye exam.
Red Flags and Emergency Response
This section is designed to be the clearest, most actionable part of this guide. If you experience any of the symptoms described here, seek in-person medical evaluation immediately. Do not wait, do not self-diagnose, do not post on social media asking if it is serious. These symptoms require an ophthalmologist or emergency department.
Symptoms Requiring Immediate Urgent Review
Emergency Symptoms Requiring Immediate Review
Sudden loss of vision, new floaters with flashes, a dark curtain across vision, severe pain, flap displacement sensation (bulk or laxity in the cornea feeling), or sudden double vision that is new and persistent.
More specifically, each of these symptoms carries different urgency:
Sudden loss of vision or dramatic worsening after initial improvement: This is not normal fluctuation. Vision should be stable or improving after the first day. Sudden worsening requires immediate evaluation.
New or sudden appearance of many floaters with or without flashes: Occasional floaters are common and benign. A sudden shower of new floaters — especially with flashes of light — may indicate a retinal tear or detachment and requires same-day evaluation.
Dark "curtain" or shadow moving across vision: This is the classic description of a retinal detachment and is a true ophthalmic emergency requiring immediate care.
Severe, unrelenting pain not controlled by over-the-counter medication: Mild-moderate discomfort is normal. Severe pain that does not respond to OTC pain relief is not.
Signs of infection: increasing redness, discharge, fever, or a feeling of warmth/heat in the eye. Infection can progress rapidly and requires prompt treatment.
Flap displacement: a sensation of bulk or laxity in the cornea, as if something has shifted. The flap should feel smooth. If something feels wrong, contact your surgeon before the next scheduled visit.
Sudden double vision (ghosting) that is new and persistent: While some ghosting can be normal in early recovery, new persistent double vision after the initial healing period requires evaluation.
Managing Emergencies After Returning Home
If you have returned home to another city or country after LASIK in Istanbul, and you experience any of the symptoms above, go to the nearest emergency department or ophthalmology urgent care immediately. Do not wait to contact your Istanbul clinic first in a medical emergency — time matters.
Before you leave Istanbul after surgery, confirm the following:
A local ophthalmologist who can see you for post-operative complications in your home city. Bring your Istanbul clinic's post-operative records and share them with your local ophthalmologist so they understand what was done.
Your Istanbul surgeon's contact details for emergencies. Get a direct phone number or WhatsApp contact, not just the clinic's general reception.
Your surgeon's preferred communication channel (phone, WhatsApp, email). Ask whether they offer remote follow-up for patients who have traveled home. Some clinics offer photo-based or video-based follow-up for minor concerns.
Written post-operative instructions in English from your Istanbul clinic to bring home and share with your local eye care provider.
Practical Guidance for Medical Tourists — Istanbul-Specific
If you are planning to have LASIK in Istanbul, several logistics considerations are unique to medical tourism and deserve specific attention before you book your trip.
Pre-Travel Planning
Choosing to travel abroad for LASIK can offer significant advantages — access to experienced surgeons, state-of-the-art facilities, and cost structures that are often more competitive than in Western countries — but it requires more logistical planning than having surgery locally.
Clinic and surgeon verification should be your first step. Look for:
JCI (Joint Commission International) accreditation: this is the international gold standard for hospital safety and quality. A JCI-accredited facility has passed rigorous standards for patient care, infection control, and clinical governance.
Turkish Health Ministry certification: relevant domestic regulatory oversight.
Surgeon experience volume: ask the clinic how many LASIK procedures the surgeon performs annually. High-volume surgeons typically have more refined technique and better outcomes data.
Technology platform: modern femtosecond laser (e.g., Intralase/Ziemer) and excimer laser (e.g., Allegretto/EX500/Visx) platforms are widely available in top Istanbul clinics.
Ask specifically: "Will [Surgeon Name] personally perform my entire procedure, including flap creation and laser ablation?" If the answer is anything other than a clear yes, ask for clarification.
Also confirm what is included in the quoted price: pre-operative exams, surgery, post-operative medications, all follow-up visits, and the enhancement policy (whether touch-ups are included in the initial fee or charged separately).
Minimum Required Stay in Istanbul
LASIK requires a minimum physical presence in Istanbul that goes beyond a typical vacation timeline. The minimum recommended stay is 5–7 days after surgery to attend the mandatory Day 1 follow-up and ideally the Day 3–5 follow-up before returning home.
Minimum Istanbul Stay
Plan a minimum 5–7 days in Istanbul after surgery to attend Day 1 and Day 3–5 follow-up appointments before returning home. Some surgeons recommend waiting 7–10 days before flying to reduce any theoretical risk from cabin pressure changes during air travel. Confirm your specific protocol with your surgeon.
Flying after LASIK: most surgeons recommend waiting at least 3–7 days before flying, as cabin pressure and low humidity may affect early corneal healing. Some clinics advise against flying within 24–48 hours entirely. Confirm your surgeon's protocol and plan your return flight accordingly.
A sample Istanbul itinerary for a LASIK medical tourist:
Day −1 or Day 0 (arrival): Pre-operative consultation and testing
Day 0 or Day 1: Surgery
Day 1: First mandatory post-operative follow-up
Day 3–5: Second follow-up, at which most patients are cleared to travel
Day 5–7: Departure (if cleared at Day 3–5 follow-up)
Post-Operative Follow-Up Plan Across Borders
The follow-up schedule after LASIK is: 24–48 hours, 1 week, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months. As a medical tourist, you will only be in Istanbul for the first 1–2 visits. For the remainder, you need a plan.
Before leaving Istanbul:
Get a detailed post-operative follow-up schedule in writing from your surgeon
Ask for your post-operative records (measurements, surgical notes, prescription, and protocol) to share with your local ophthalmologist at home
Ask your Istanbul clinic whether they offer remote follow-up for international patients — some will review photos or conduct video consultations for the later follow-up windows
Confirm that your local ophthalmologist is comfortable with the post-operative protocol and can manage complications if they arise
Communication and Emergency Access
Before surgery, confirm that your Istanbul clinic has a direct communication channel for post-operative concerns — not just a clinic reception line, but a direct line to the medical team. Ask:
Is there a mobile/WhatsApp number I can reach for post-operative concerns?
Is there someone available 24/7 for emergencies, or are emergency contacts limited to business hours?
What is the clinic's protocol if I have a concern after returning home but before my local ophthalmologist can see me?
Getting the answer to these questions before surgery gives you an escalation path if something feels wrong in the weeks after returning home.
Comparing LASIK to Other Procedures — Recovery Context
LASIK is one of several corneal refractive procedures available. Understanding how its recovery compares to alternatives can help you appreciate why this timeline is specific to LASIK and what trade-offs exist with other approaches.
LASIK vs. PRK
PRK (Photorefractive Keratectomy) is the predecessor to LASIK and does not involve creating a corneal flap. Instead, the epithelial layer is removed and allowed to regenerate. This changes the recovery profile significantly:
PRK recovery is slower: functional vision typically returns within 1–2 weeks, compared to 24–48 hours for LASIK
PRK has a longer period of discomfort: the epithelial healing process is more uncomfortable than the LASIK flap recovery
PRK avoids the flap: for some patients (e.g., those with thin corneas or high risk of eye trauma), PRK may be preferred specifically because there is no flap
For patients who are candidates for both, the choice often comes down to preference for fast recovery (LASIK) versus avoiding a permanent corneal flap (PRK). For a detailed PRK recovery timeline, see PRK Recovery Timeline.
LASIK vs. SMILE
SMILE (Small Incision Lenticule Extraction) is a newer flap-free technique that creates a small lenticule within the cornea and removes it through a tiny incision. Key differences:
SMILE recovery is similar to LASIK in speed — approximately 24–48 hours to functional vision
SMILE may have lower dry eye risk in early post-operative period compared to LASIK, based on some comparative studies
SMILE is flap-free: the small incision is less invasive than a LASIK flap, potentially reducing long-term biomechanical risk
SMILE is increasingly popular for patients with higher myopia prescriptions and those seeking flap-free options. For a detailed SMILE recovery timeline, see SMILE Recovery Timeline.
Feature
Procedure
Recovery Time to Functional Vision
Flap Required
Dry Eye Risk
LASIK
24–48 hours
Yes
Moderate
PRK
1–4 weeks
No
Moderate
SMILE
24–48 hours
No (small incision)
Lower
LASIK vs. ICL
ICL (Implantable Collamer Lens) is a fundamentally different approach: instead of reshaping the cornea with a laser, a synthetic lens is implanted inside the eye in front of the natural lens. It is a reversible intraocular procedure rather than a corneal laser procedure. Recovery and risk profile differ substantially:
ICL involves intraocular surgery: it carries the risks associated with any intraocular procedure (infection, intraocular bleeding, cataract formation)
ICL does not involve a corneal flap: recovery is measured differently than LASIK/PRK/SMILE
ICL may be preferred for very high prescriptions: where corneal thickness is insufficient for laser correction
Pre-operative preparation directly affects outcomes: Stop contact lenses at the appropriate time, optimize any dry eye before surgery, and confirm all logistics (transport, accommodation, companion) before procedure day.
The procedure itself is quick: Active laser time is only seconds per eye; total clinic time is under 30 minutes. Both eyes are treated in the same session.
The first 72 hours are the critical healing window: Rest, use your drops, avoid eye rubbing, and attend the mandatory Day 1 follow-up.
Medical tourists should plan a minimum 5–7 day stay in Istanbul before returning home, accounting for Day 1 and Day 3–5 follow-up visits.
Vision stabilization takes 3–6 months: Fluctuations in the first weeks are normal. Enhancement decisions should wait until vision is stable, which typically requires two consecutive stable measurements at least 3 months apart.
Red flags require immediate in-person review: Sudden vision loss, new floaters with flashes, a dark curtain over vision, severe pain, or any sign of flap disturbance means go to an emergency department or contact your surgeon immediately.
Dry eye is the most common long-term symptom but typically improves over 12 months. Manage it proactively with artificial tears and discuss prescription options with your surgeon if needed.
Satisfaction rates are high — >95% — but new visual symptoms develop in a meaningful proportion of patients in the first 3 months. Most resolve over time.
Long-term: Annual eye exams, protective eyewear during high-risk activities, and informing all future eye care providers of your LASIK history.
4.“Outcomes of femtosecond laser in situ keratomileusis with the FS200 and EX500.” Journal of Cataract & Refractive Surgery. 2018. Accessed 2026-04-28.https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5960747/