What is an implantable contact lens, and who tends to be suitable for it?
An implantable contact lens, usually called an ICL, is a lens placed inside the eye to correct short sight, long sight, and some levels of astigmatism. It is often considered for adults with stable prescriptions who may not be suitable for laser eye surgery, including people with high prescriptions, thin corneas, or dry eyes. Suitability depends on detailed measurements, eye health, and a full assessment by a consultant ophthalmologist.
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Implantable contact lenses explained: what are they and how do they work?
An implantable contact lens sits inside the eye, where it works with your natural lens to focus light more accurately onto the retina. A simple way to picture it is this: instead of wearing a contact lens on the surface of the eye each day, an internal contact lens is placed in a carefully measured position behind the iris and in front of the natural lens.
Unlike ordinary contact lenses, an ICL does not need cleaning, removal, or daily handling. Unlike laser procedures such as LASIK or TransPRK, the implantable lens procedure does not reshape the cornea. That point matters for people whose corneas are thinner than ideal or whose prescription sits outside the usual laser treatment range.
The lens itself is commonly made from a soft biocompatible material often described as collamer. Once in place, it is not visible to other people in normal conversation, and patients do not feel it in the way they might feel a dry or displaced surface contact lens.
A quick comparison helps:
- External contact lenses sit on the surface of the eye and must be put in and taken out.
- LASIK and TransPRK reshape the cornea with laser treatment.
- ICL surgery places a lens inside the eye and preserves the cornea.
Many readers ask what an ICL is in practical terms, and the clearest answer is that it is one option within the wider vision correction spectrum. It can offer strong optical quality for selected patients, with corneal preservation as a key feature.
Some people assume an internal lens must mean a permanent, irreversible change. The reality is more nuanced. An ICL is intended as a long-term treatment, but the lens can usually be removed or exchanged if that is ever clinically necessary. Royal College of Ophthalmologists standards, GMC guidance, and CQC-regulated care all place proper informed consent at the centre of this conversation, so the aim is clarity rather than hype.
Who is an implantable contact lens suitable for?
ICL eligibility usually comes into focus when laser eye surgery is possible in theory but not ideal in practice. Adults with stable vision, healthy eyes, and higher prescriptions often fall into this group.
Typical features that may make someone suitable include:
- Age over 21 with a stable prescription
- Moderate to high short sight, and sometimes long sight
- Astigmatism that can be corrected within the treatment plan
- Corneas that are too thin for laser surgery
- Dry eye symptoms that may make corneal laser treatment less appealing
High prescription is one of the most common reasons people look into ICL vs laser suitability. If your glasses are very strong, laser treatment may remove too much corneal tissue or may not give the best optical balance. In that setting, an implantable lens can be worth assessing.
Thin corneas also change the picture. Because an ICL works inside the eye and does not rely on reshaping the front surface, corneal thickness is less of a limiting factor. Dry eye can be another reason for interest, since some patients prefer a corneal-preserving option.
Age matters as well. Many suitable patients are in their twenties, thirties, or forties. Once natural lens changes or early cataracts begin to appear, lens replacement surgery may become the more appropriate route. That is why the same prescription does not always lead to the same recommendation in different age groups.
Certain factors may rule ICL out or lead to extra caution. Cataracts, uncontrolled glaucoma, active eye disease, and some retinal problems may change the treatment plan. The space inside the eye also needs to be measured carefully, because safe intraocular lens placement depends on exact dimensions, not guesswork.
At The Vision Surgeon, that assessment is based on detailed testing and ophthalmology best practice rather than a quick screening conversation, because the right answer is sometimes that another procedure fits better.
The implantable contact lens procedure: what to expect before, during, and after
Most anxiety around ICL surgery process comes from not knowing what the day will feel like. The actual pathway is usually straightforward, with three clear stages: assessment, treatment, and aftercare.
Before surgery
Your ICL consultation involves more than checking your glasses prescription. The surgeon needs precise eye measurements, including prescription, corneal shape, corneal thickness, anterior chamber depth, and the size needed for the lens itself. Pupil size, retinal health, and general eye health are also reviewed.
Because this is an internal procedure, the suitability checks are detailed for good reason. A consultant ophthalmologist should explain whether an ICL is appropriate, what the alternatives are, and what risks need to be weighed. That approach reflects GMC patient care guidance and the standards expected in a CQC-regulated setting.
During surgery
On the day, drops are used to prepare and numb the eye with local anaesthetic. Patients are awake, but the eye is made comfortable and the area is kept controlled and sterile.
The surgeon makes a very small opening, folds the lens, inserts it into the eye, and positions it behind the iris. Surgical precision matters here, because the lens must sit in the correct place and vault properly over the natural lens. The treatment itself is usually quick, although the full appointment takes longer because preparation and immediate recovery checks are part of the process.
Rather than being assessed by one clinician and treated by another on surgery day, a consultant-led model keeps decision-making and treatment in the same hands. That continuity can make the whole experience feel clearer, especially if you are balancing ICL against other options.
After surgery
Vision often begins to improve soon after treatment, but recovery is still a process. Some people notice clearer sight within a day or two, whereas others need a little longer for vision to settle. Follow-up appointments are used to check healing, pressure inside the eye, lens position, and the quality of vision.
Aftercare instructions usually cover eye drops, when to return to work, when to drive, and how long to avoid rubbing the eyes, swimming, or heavy exercise. Reading the screen on your phone later the same day is very different from being ready for sport, gym sessions, or dusty work environments.
Risks, benefits, and realistic expectations with implantable contact lenses
ICL benefits and ICL risks need to be discussed together. That balance is part of informed consent, and it is also the standard expected under GMC guidance and ASA/CAP rules around responsible medical advertising.
Potential benefits may include:
- Treatment of higher prescriptions than laser can usually manage
- Corneal preservation, since no corneal tissue is removed
- Good visual quality in appropriately selected patients
- A treatment that is intended to be long-lasting
- The possibility of lens removal or exchange if clinically required
Risks and side effects can include infection, inflammation, glare or halos, raised eye pressure, cataract formation, and lens repositioning if the fit is not ideal or changes over time. Some patients may still need glasses for certain tasks, particularly in low light or for close work as they get older.
Safety questions often come down to wording. Asking “is ICL safe” is understandable, but no eye procedure is risk-free. A better way to frame it is that ICL surgery is a well-established option when carried out in suitable patients with careful measurements, proper surgical technique, and structured follow-up.
Realistic expectations matter just as much as the procedure itself. An ICL can reduce dependence on glasses or contact lenses, sometimes very significantly, but it does not stop the normal ageing of the eye. Reading glasses may still be needed later in life, and future cataract surgery may still become relevant with age. Royal College of Ophthalmologists guidance consistently supports this kind of balanced conversation because good outcomes begin with accurate expectations, not optimistic slogans.
Cost of implantable contact lens surgery and value considerations
ICL surgery cost in the UK is usually discussed per eye. A typical guide is around £3,000 per eye, although the final figure depends on the prescription, the lens selected, and the details of the treatment plan.
That price usually reflects several parts of care, such as:
- Pre-operative assessment and eye measurements
- The implantable lens itself
- The surgical procedure
- Immediate aftercare and follow-up reviews
Pricing should be viewed as indicative rather than fixed. Complex prescriptions, additional imaging, or individual clinical factors can affect the overall cost. ASA/CAP pricing guidance also supports clear presentation of costs without implying that every patient will pay exactly the same amount.
Value is often easier to judge over time than on the day you first read the figure. Ongoing spending on glasses, prescription sunglasses, contact lenses, solutions, and eye checks can add up over many years. For some people, that long-term comparison makes the implantable contact lens price feel more understandable, particularly if contact lens wear has become uncomfortable or inconvenient.
The Vision Surgeon discusses treatment costs in the context of what is clinically suitable and what is included, which means that the financial decision sits alongside the medical one rather than replacing it.
Local expertise: why choose a consultant-led approach for ICL surgery in Essex
A local eye surgeon can offer the same convenience people want from a nearby clinic, but the structure of care still matters. Some patients are surprised to learn that in certain settings, the person who assesses them is not the surgeon who treats them.
Essex-led eye surgery changes that experience. Mr Mukherjee sees patients personally, assesses suitability, performs the procedure, and manages aftercare. For an operation that relies on exact measurements and careful lens sizing, continuity of care is more than a pleasant extra. It links the original recommendation to the technical decisions made in theatre and the follow-up decisions made afterwards.
His background also matters in a practical way. Mr Mukherjee is a consultant ophthalmologist, triple fellowship-trained in refractive surgery, cornea, and glaucoma, with CertLRS recognition from the Royal College of Ophthalmologists. He also leads within the NHS, which gives patients the reassurance of broad surgical experience across routine and complex eye care.
Colchester is a realistic treatment base for people across Essex and Suffolk, including those who would otherwise assume they need to travel further for specialist care. Avoiding a trip to London can make consultation, surgery, and follow-up much easier to manage, especially if a family member is helping with transport on the day of treatment.
For many readers, the strongest point is simple: the same named surgeon follows the case from first measurements to final review.
Looking ahead: the changing role of implantable contact lenses in vision correction
ICLs now sit firmly within mainstream vision correction options, but they are still sometimes misunderstood. They are neither a niche treatment for a tiny group nor the answer for everyone. They are one well-established choice within a broader pathway that also includes glasses, external contact lenses, laser eye surgery, lens replacement surgery, and cataract surgery when age-related lens change becomes part of the picture.
Lens technology and pre-operative measurement tools continue to improve, allowing more precise planning and better matching between patient and procedure. Ophthalmic research bodies and professional standards from organisations such as the Royal College of Ophthalmologists support this direction of travel, with patient-centred decision-making at the centre of modern refractive care.
A common misconception is that choosing an ICL locks the eye into one fixed future. In practice, eye care changes over time because eyes change over time. Prescription shifts, presbyopia, and cataracts can all alter what matters most later on, so the right decision is the one that fits your eyes now and still makes sense within your longer-term eye health.
Seen in that light, implantable contact lenses are best understood as a precise option for the right patient, not a universal solution. The most useful question is rarely which procedure sounds most advanced. The more helpful question is which one suits the shape, health, and future needs of your eyes.



