Femto LASIK is an advanced form of LASIK eye surgery that uses a femtosecond laser to create a precise corneal flap before vision correction. It offers improved accuracy, safety, and faster recovery compared to traditional blade-based LASIK procedures.

For anyone who has worn glasses since school, there is a particular daydream: waking up, looking at the clock, and actually being able to read it. Not fumbling on the bedside table. Not squinting. Just seeing.
LASIK is what made that daydream common. Femto LASIK is what made it more precise.
Femto LASIK, also called bladeless LASIK or all-laser LASIK, is a laser vision correction procedure with two key steps. First, a femtosecond laser creates a thin corneal flap. Then, an excimer laser reshapes the underlying corneal tissue to correct refractive errors: myopia (short-sightedness), hyperopia (long-sightedness), and astigmatism.
In conventional LASIK, the corneal flap is created by a mechanical device with a tiny oscillating blade, called a microkeratome. It works, and millions of successful LASIK procedures have used it. But the blade introduces small variability: flap thickness can differ slightly, and rare flap complications do occur.
Femto LASIK replaces the blade entirely. The femtosecond laser places thousands of microscopic bubbles at a precise depth in the cornea, effectively cutting a flap that is uniform in thickness, diameter, and edge geometry. The result, on average, is a cleaner flap. That translates to marginally less induced dry eye, more consistent wound geometry, and a slightly better safety profile in certain thin-cornea cases.
Femto LASIK is now one of the most widely performed variants of LASIK globally. Leading eye hospitals offer it as part of a broader laser refractive surgery programme, alongside SMILE, PRK, and TransPRK.
The shift from blade-based LASIK to bladeless Femto LASIK in Indian premium eye care has happened gradually over the past decade. The procedure is now available in all major Indian cities, and patient demand has played a real role in its spread. Many candidates specifically ask for the bladeless option, and many surgeons prefer its precision.
India has a very large population of young myopic adults. Urban schools, long screen hours, and the genetic picture all contribute. For this population, refractive surgery is less a luxury and more a genuine quality-of-life decision, particularly for those in professions where glasses or contact lenses are impractical: defence forces, pilots, athletes, performers, field engineers, long-distance drivers.
| Type | Description | Key Advantage |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Femto LASIK | Femtosecond flap plus conventional excimer laser treatment | Precise flap; corrects myopia, hyperopia, astigmatism |
| Wavefront-Optimised Femto LASIK | Femtosecond flap plus wavefront-optimised excimer treatment | Reduces spherical aberration; better night vision quality |
| Wavefront-Guided (Custom) Femto LASIK | Femtosecond flap plus aberrometry-guided excimer treatment | Corrects higher-order aberrations specific to each eye |
| Topography-Guided Femto LASIK (Contoura) | Femtosecond flap plus topography-guided ablation | Addresses corneal irregularities beyond the refractive prescription |
Femto LASIK happens in two sequential laser steps, usually within minutes of each other. You walk in wearing glasses and walk out without them, more or less.
You lie under the femtosecond laser. A suction ring stabilises the eye (you feel pressure, but no pain). The femtosecond laser creates thousands of microscopic bubbles within the corneal stroma at a pre-programmed depth, separating the tissue along a defined plane. This forms a thin corneal flap, typically 90 to 120 microns thick, with smooth, uniform edges. The surgeon then gently lifts the flap to expose the stroma beneath.
The bed moves you under the excimer laser. An eye-tracking system locks onto your pupil and iris patterns, monitoring position several thousand times per second. The excimer laser ablates a precisely calculated amount of corneal tissue, sculpting a new curvature in under 60 seconds. The flap is replaced and self-adheres, no sutures required. Total theatre time is roughly 15 to 20 minutes for both eyes. The laser time on each eye is measured in seconds.
Femto LASIK is an elective procedure for people who want to reduce or eliminate dependence on glasses or contact lenses. A candidate is generally a good fit if they:
A thorough pre-operative evaluation (corneal topography, pachymetry, wavefront analysis) is essential before anyone gets cleared for Femto LASIK. Topography specifically screens for early keratoconus, which is a hard no for any laser refractive surgery. Skipping this step is the kind of shortcut that ruins people’s vision.
| Procedure Type | Approximate Cost (INR, Both Eyes) |
|---|---|
| Standard Femto LASIK | ₹45,000 – ₹80,000 |
| Wavefront-Optimised Femto LASIK | ₹60,000 – ₹1,00,000 |
| Custom / Wavefront-Guided Femto LASIK | ₹70,000 – ₹1,10,000 |
| Topography-Guided (Contoura) Femto LASIK | ₹80,000 – ₹1,20,000 |
Costs vary by city, hospital, and prescription range. After a suitability evaluation at eye hospitals, you get a personalized quote, not a number off a website.
Most patients notice substantially improved vision within hours. The eyes feel scratchy, teary, and light-sensitive for about four to six hours. Rest is the instruction. By the next morning, most people are seeing well enough to function without glasses for most daily activities.
Mild halos and starburst around lights at night are common in the first few weeks and usually settle as the cornea remodels. Dry eye is the most commonly reported side effect, caused by temporary disruption of the corneal nerves involved in flap creation. It usually improves over three to six months with regular lubricating drops. Because the femtosecond flap is more precise than a blade-made flap, some studies suggest slightly less post-operative dry eye with Femto LASIK, though individual outcomes vary and this is not a guarantee.
Healthline. Femto LASIK: What You Need to Know.
EyeWiki (AAO). Femtosecond Lasers and LASIK.
American Academy of Ophthalmology. LASIK.
Femto LASIK creates a corneal flap using the femtosecond laser, then reshapes the cornea with an excimer laser. SMILE is entirely flapless: it uses only a femtosecond laser to create and then extract a small piece of corneal tissue (a lenticule) through a tiny side incision. SMILE preserves more of the corneal surface integrity and tends to have less post-op dry eye. Femto LASIK offers a larger correction range and is technically easier for enhancement procedures later. Both are excellent for myopia and astigmatism. The choice depends on your eye.
The corneal reshaping is permanent. The cornea does not grow back. What can change over time is unrelated: presbyopia (age-related loss of near focus) typically appears in the early to mid-40s and affects everyone, LASIK or not. So while your distance vision from Femto LASIK stays stable for years, reading glasses may still enter your life in your forties. This is biology, not a failure of the procedure.
The flap heals firmly within weeks. In that early window, a significant eye trauma (a direct blow, aggressive rubbing) could theoretically dislodge it, which is why contact sports and protective goggles get emphasized. In the long term, a well-healed flap is very stable. Cases of late flap dislocation are rare and almost always involve a specific trauma.
No. Anaesthetic drops handle sensation during the procedure. You feel pressure when the suction ring goes on, but not pain. In the hours after, expect grittiness, watering, and light sensitivity. Rest in a dark room, use the drops, and most people are comfortable by the next morning.
Eighteen is the technical minimum, but most surgeons prefer to wait until at least 21, by which point the prescription is more likely to have settled. A stable prescription for one to two years is what really matters, not a particular birthday.
Yes. Simultaneous bilateral Femto LASIK is the standard approach and is both safe and practical for most patients. Doing one eye at a time is unnecessary in a straightforward case and just doubles the recovery window.
The corneal reshaping is permanent, and most patients maintain excellent distance vision for many years. A small proportion see some regression over time, particularly those with very high prescriptions, and they may benefit from an enhancement procedure later.
If there is significant regression or a genuine new refractive change, an enhancement is often possible: the original flap is lifted and the excimer laser is reapplied. Whether this is safe depends on the remaining corneal thickness, which is assessed on a case-by-case basis.
Significant dry eye is a relative contraindication because LASIK can worsen it, at least in the short term. Mild dry eye can often be managed pre-operatively with lubricants and, if needed, punctal plugs, with surgery considered afterwards. Patients with genuinely severe dry eye are usually better candidates for surface ablation procedures such as PRK or TransPRK, or sometimes for SMILE.
Yes. Femto LASIK is offered as part of a comprehensive refractive surgery service. A pre-operative consultation works out whether Femto LASIK, SMILE, PRK, or TransPRK is the right fit for your eyes. The goal is a happy patient, not a particular procedure count.
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References
Healthline. Femto LASIK: What You Need to Know.
EyeWiki (AAO). Femtosecond Lasers and LASIK.
American Academy of Ophthalmology. LASIK.