Czech Republic Eye Surgery Cost: Complete 2026 Price Guide
The Czech Republic has become one of Europe’s most established destinations for elective eye surgery. Thousands of patients from the UK, Ireland, Germany, Scandinavia and beyond travel to Prague each year for LASIK, lens replacement and cataract surgery. The primary driver is cost: a patient quoted £8,000 for lens replacement in London may pay €3,000–€4,000 for the same procedure, using the same technology, at a leading Prague clinic operating under the same EU regulatory standards.
This guide provides a full breakdown of eye surgery costs in the Czech Republic as of 2026 — procedure by procedure, compared with UK and German private rates — and explains clearly what is and is not included in a typical Prague package.
Laser eye surgery costs in the Czech Republic
| Procedure | Czech Republic (per eye) | UK / Germany (per eye) |
|---|---|---|
| LASEK / PRK | €650–€1,200 | €1,200–€2,800 |
| Standard LASIK | €750–€1,400 | €1,400–€3,000 |
| Femto-LASIK | €850–€1,600 | €1,500–€3,500 |
| ReLEx SMILE / SMILE Pro | €1,000–€2,200 | €2,000–€4,000 |
| Wavefront / topography-guided LASIK | €950–€1,800 | €1,600–€3,800 |
Lens replacement surgery (RLE) costs
The cost of lens replacement varies primarily based on the type of intraocular lens (IOL) implanted. Premium IOLs that restore vision at near, intermediate and distance command a higher price than standard monofocal lenses:
| IOL Type | Czech Republic (per eye) | UK / Germany (per eye) |
|---|---|---|
| Monofocal IOL | €1,200–€2,000 | €2,500–€4,200 |
| Multifocal IOL | €1,400–€2,400 | €3,000–€5,500 |
| Trifocal IOL | €1,490–€2,800 | €3,500–€6,500 |
| EDOF (Extended Depth of Focus) | €1,400–€2,600 | €3,200–€6,000 |
| Toric IOL (astigmatism correction) | €1,400–€2,500 | €3,000–€5,800 |
Cataract surgery costs
| IOL / Technique | Czech Republic (per eye) | UK private / Germany (per eye) |
|---|---|---|
| Standard monofocal | €1,100–€1,900 | €2,000–€4,000 |
| Premium monofocal | €1,200–€2,100 | €2,500–€4,500 |
| Multifocal IOL | €1,350–€2,300 | €3,000–€5,500 |
| Trifocal IOL | €1,450–€2,600 | €3,500–€6,000 |
| EDOF IOL | €1,350–€2,400 | €3,200–€5,800 |
| Laser-assisted (FLACS) — additional | +€200–€400 | +€500–€1,000 |
* Prices per eye, based on publicly available clinic data as of early 2026. Always request a personalised quote after full diagnostic assessment.
Consultation and diagnostics
Before any procedure, a comprehensive pre-operative assessment is required. This includes corneal topography, pachymetry, biometry (for IOL power calculation), refraction, intraocular pressure and pupil assessment. In Prague, a full diagnostic assessment typically costs €80–€150. This fee is often deducted from the procedure cost on the day of surgery. Initial online consultations — to assess suitability and answer questions — are typically free at clinics set up for international patients.
What is included in the price?
Czech Republic pricing can vary significantly depending on what is included. Always clarify before comparing quotes. A reputable Prague clinic catering to international patients should include:
- ✓Full pre-operative diagnostic assessment (corneal topography, biometry, refraction)
- ✓The surgical procedure itself, including local anaesthetic (eye drops)
- ✓The IOL or laser treatment as quoted — with no upgrades pushed on the day
- ✓Post-operative eye drops and medication for the initial recovery period
- ✓At least one post-operative check (next morning)
- ✓Online follow-up consultation after your return home
- ✓English-speaking coordination throughout
What is typically not included: flights, accommodation and airport transfers. Return flights from the UK to Prague cost €80–€180. Hotels near Prague clinics from €70–€120 per night.
Why is eye surgery cheaper in the Czech Republic?
The price difference is structural — not a reflection of lower clinical quality. Czech clinics are cheaper for reasons that have nothing to do with the procedure itself:
Lower cost of living: Clinic rental, staff salaries and operational costs in Prague are substantially lower than in London, Dublin or Munich. A surgeon providing the same technical skill commands a lower fee because the local economy operates at a different price level.
Same equipment, lower overheads: Czech clinics buy the same Zeiss VISUMAX 800 lasers, Alcon equipment and premium IOLs from the same European distributors as Western European clinics. Equipment costs are similar — it is the surrounding operational structure that differs.
Not lower quality: Czech medical education, surgical training and regulatory oversight meet the same EU standards as any other EU member state. FEBO-certified Czech surgeons have passed the same European Board examination as their German or French equivalents.
Does the saving hold up after travel costs?
| Travel cost element | Estimated cost (UK to Prague) |
|---|---|
| Return flights | €80–€180 |
| Hotel (2 nights, 3-star) | €140–€240 |
| Airport transfers + local transport | €30–€60 |
| Total additional travel cost | €250–€480 |
For lens replacement where the net saving vs. UK private rates is €4,000–€8,000 for both eyes, adding €300–€500 in travel costs barely registers. Even for LASIK — where the saving might be €800–€1,500 — the arithmetic still typically favours Prague.
Frequently asked questions
Can I get an online quote without visiting Prague first?+
Most clinics will provide a preliminary price range based on your prescription and procedure type. However, a definitive quote can only be issued after a full in-person diagnostic assessment — there are too many individual variables (corneal thickness, eye pressure, biometry) to price accurately without examination. Clinics that issue firm, binding quotes without diagnostics should be treated with caution.
How many trips to Prague will I need?+
Most procedures require a minimum of two visits: a pre-operative assessment and the procedure itself, usually the following day. Many Prague clinics allow both to be completed in a single trip of 2–3 nights. A follow-up check at 4–6 weeks is strongly recommended — this can often be performed remotely (video consultation) or delegated to a local optometrist.
Are Prague all-inclusive prices really all-inclusive?+
It depends on the clinic. Reputable clinics include diagnostics, surgery, medication, follow-up checks and coordinator support in the quoted price. Some clinics quote a base surgery fee and charge separately for diagnostics or follow-up. Always ask for a written breakdown of what is and is not included before accepting a quote.
Is LASIK in Prague as good as LASIK in the UK?+
Yes, at a reputable clinic. Leading Prague clinics use the same laser platforms as UK and German private centres — Zeiss VISUMAX 800, Alcon WaveLight EX500. Their surgeons hold FEBO certification — the European Board of Ophthalmology standard. The clinical procedure and outcomes are equivalent. The difference is cost of living and operational overheads, not clinical quality.
What are the red flags when choosing a Prague eye clinic?+
Be cautious of clinics that: quote a firm price without requiring a diagnostic assessment; cannot name the specific surgeon in advance; cannot provide a FEBO number; have no English-language support; offer prices that seem unusually low even by Prague standards; or provide no clear protocol for managing international patient complications.
Does my health insurance cover eye surgery in the Czech Republic?+
Standard UK NHS or EU statutory health insurance does not cover elective procedures abroad. Some private health insurance policies include planned procedures in other EU countries — check your policy wording. Specialist medical travel insurance is available and recommended for any planned surgical procedure outside your home country.
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