ICL Cost in the Philippines: What Patients Should Expect Before Booking
🧠 Dr. Roque’s Quick Answer
The cost of ICL surgery depends on more than the lens itself. Your final quotation may change based on your prescription, whether you have astigmatism, the exact lens model recommended for your eyes, the diagnostic tests required, the surgical facility, and whether one or both eyes are treated. The safest way to think about ICL cost is not “How much is the cheapest lens surgery?” but “What is the correct procedure plan for my eyes, and what does that plan include?”
🎯 Focus
Help patients understand what drives ICL pricing and how to compare quotations intelligently.
🧭 Goal
Reduce confusion, avoid misleading “cheap package” thinking, and guide the next safe step.
🛡️ Evidence-Based
Cost counseling should be individualized because candidacy, lens selection, and surgical planning vary from one patient to another.
Quick navigation: What is ICL? · What affects cost? · What is included? · What may not be included? · How to compare quotations · FAQ
What is ICL surgery?
ICL stands for implantable collamer lens. It is a lens placed inside the eye to correct refractive error such as nearsightedness, and in selected cases, astigmatism. Unlike cataract surgery or refractive lens exchange, your natural lens is not removed during ICL surgery.
That distinction matters because patients sometimes compare ICL pricing with LASIK, SMILE, or lens replacement as if they were interchangeable. They are not. Each procedure has a different surgical plan, a different cost structure, and a different risk-benefit profile.
💡 Dr. Roque’s Analogy
Think of ICL cost the way you would think about buying precision parts for a high-performance camera. The price is not just for “a piece of hardware.” You are paying for the correct measurement, the correct part, careful installation, safety checks, and follow-up. A cheaper quote is not automatically a better quote if it skips an important step.
What affects the cost of ICL surgery?
This is where many patients oversimplify the decision. They ask for one number. Real life is not that clean. Your ICL quotation may change because of the factors below.
1) Your exact refractive error
The stronger the prescription and the more complex the correction, the more important precise planning becomes. Some patients are straightforward. Others require more careful workup before a safe recommendation can be made.
2) Whether you have astigmatism
Patients with clinically significant astigmatism may need a toric version of the lens. That changes planning and can affect the overall package.
3) The lens model recommended for your eyes
Not every patient receives the same lens specification. Eye size, anterior chamber measurements, corneal data, and refractive targets all matter. Good planning is not optional here.
4) Preoperative diagnostics
ICL surgery should never be sold like an off-the-shelf commodity. A proper workup may include refraction, corneal imaging, anterior chamber assessment, white-to-white measurements, intraocular pressure evaluation, retinal examination, and other tests when indicated.
5) Surgical facility and operating room costs
Hospital-based surgery, ambulatory surgery, and different facility standards may affect the final quotation. Patients should understand what venue fees are included and what items are billed separately.
6) Professional fees and perioperative care
Some quotations include surgeon professional fees, assistant fees, perioperative medications, and routine follow-up. Others advertise a smaller number first, then add major items later. That is where confusion starts.
7) One eye or both eyes
Bilateral planning is common in refractive surgery, but the total cost and timing still depend on your evaluation findings, safety considerations, and the clinic’s surgical plan.
What is usually included in an ICL quotation?
Every clinic structures packages differently, so do not assume. Ask for a written breakdown. In many cases, an ICL quotation may include some or most of the following:
- Surgeon professional fee
- Implantable lens cost
- Operating room or facility fee
- Routine consumables used during surgery
- Standard postoperative follow-up visits for a defined period
- Selected medications or written postoperative instructions
- Preoperative diagnostics, if bundled into the package
What may not be included?
This is where patients get caught off guard. A lower advertised figure may exclude important items. Ask specifically whether these are included or separate:
- Diagnostic testing before surgery
- Additional medications
- Extra follow-up beyond the routine package
- Retinal clearance or subspecialty evaluation if needed
- Treatment of dry eye or ocular surface disease before surgery
- Management of unexpected findings that delay or change the plan
- Any enhancement, repositioning, or separate intervention if clinically required later
A polished sales package can look simple. Real surgical planning is not always simple. That is why a transparent quotation matters.
🧠 Dr. Roque’s Key Learning Points
- ICL cost is not defined by one number alone.
- The lens, diagnostics, facility, and follow-up all affect pricing.
- Toric correction for astigmatism may change the cost structure.
- The cheapest quote is not automatically the safest or best value.
- A transparent written breakdown is better than a vague package price.
- Your final plan depends on candidacy, measurements, and clinical judgment.
- Good cost counseling should reduce surprises, not create them.
Anatomy Micro-Primer
ICL surgery places a lens inside the eye, in front of your natural lens and behind the iris. Because the lens sits in a precise internal position, measurements matter. In simple terms, the eye has to be the right shape and size for the lens to fit safely and perform well.
Terminology Glossary
- ICL: Implantable collamer lens placed inside the eye to correct refractive error.
- Refractive error: A focusing problem such as nearsightedness, farsightedness, or astigmatism.
- Toric lens: A lens designed to correct astigmatism.
- Anterior chamber: The front internal space of the eye that helps determine ICL suitability.
- Candidacy: Whether a procedure is appropriate and safe for your specific eyes.
How should patients compare ICL quotations?
Ask these questions before deciding:
- What exact lens is being recommended for me?
- Is the quote per eye or for both eyes?
- Are diagnostics included or separate?
- Are postoperative visits included?
- Are medications included?
- Is astigmatism correction already part of the package if I need it?
- What costs might still be added later?
- What happens if my workup shows that I am not a good ICL candidate?
Here is the ruthless truth: a low number without context is not a decision tool. It is marketing. A useful quotation helps you understand exactly what you are paying for and why that plan fits your eyes.
🚨 Dr. Roque’s Emergency Warning
A cost page should never replace a proper eye evaluation. If you have sudden vision loss, flashes, floaters, severe eye pain, marked redness, trauma, or other alarming symptoms, do not shop for refractive surgery first. Get urgent eye care first.
Who is this page for?
This page is for patients who are already considering ICL and want to understand how pricing works. It is especially useful if:
- you have high myopia and are exploring alternatives to LASIK or SMILE,
- you want to budget properly before your consultation,
- you have seen different quotations and are trying to compare them intelligently, or
- you want to know what questions to ask before committing to surgery.
Related Reading
Frequently Asked Questions
1) Is ICL more expensive than LASIK?
In many cases, yes. But that is the wrong first question. The right question is whether ICL is the better procedure for your eyes. A cheaper procedure is not a better value if it is the wrong procedure.
2) Why can two clinics quote different prices for ICL?
Because packages differ. Lens type, diagnostics, facility fees, surgeon fees, medications, and follow-up may not be bundled in the same way.
3) Is the quotation usually per eye?
Often, yes, but never assume. Ask whether the number is per eye or for both eyes combined.
4) Does astigmatism affect ICL cost?
It can. If your eye requires a toric correction plan, that may affect the quotation.
5) Are preoperative tests really necessary?
Yes. ICL is not a procedure that should be approved based on a casual screening alone. Measurements and safety checks are central to good results.
6) Can I know the exact cost without a consultation?
You may be given a starting framework, but the exact plan should follow a proper examination and diagnostics.
7) Is the cheapest ICL package a good sign?
Not by itself. Low pricing without transparency can hide missing diagnostics, missing follow-up, or separate fees that appear later.
8) Can ICL cost change after the workup?
Yes. Your measurements may show that a different lens plan, additional preparation, or even a different procedure is more appropriate.
9) Is ICL covered by insurance?
Coverage varies and often depends on the payer, the indication, and policy rules. Do not assume approval. Ask your clinic and your insurer directly.
10) What is the smartest next step if I am seriously considering ICL?
Book a refractive surgery consultation, get the proper diagnostics, and ask for a transparent written quotation based on your actual eyes—not on generic advertising.
✅ Dr. Roque’s Take-Home Message
The real question is not “What is the cheapest ICL price?” The real question is “What is the right refractive plan for my eyes, and what does that plan truly cost?” Good cost counseling is transparent, individualized, and medically grounded. That is how patients avoid unpleasant surprises and make better decisions.
References
- Standard refractive surgery and implantable lens educational references should be reviewed and updated before final publication.
- Procedure-specific counseling should be aligned with the current lens platform, current diagnostics, and current clinic workflow.
- Final pricing, inclusions, and exclusions should be verified against the clinic’s active financial quotation protocol before publishing.
ROQUE Eye Clinic Patient Education Series
Reviewed by the Roque Advisory Council
Dr. Manolette Roque | Dr. Barbara Roque
St. Luke’s Medical Center Global City | Asian Hospital Medical Center
Philippines
Medical Disclaimer: This page provides general educational information only. Suitability for ICL surgery, exact pricing, financial inclusions, and clinical recommendations must be confirmed during an in-person consultation and diagnostic workup.






