The LASIK Vision Institute is a refractive surgery clinic that performs LASIK, PRK, and related vision-correction procedures. It operates as an independent practice within Oklahoma City's landscape of optometry and ophthalmology providers, positioning itself for patients who want surgical vision correction without needing a referral from a primary-care eye doctor.
LASIK Vision Institute specializes in permanent vision correction through laser eye surgery. The clinic performs laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis (LASIK) for myopia, hyperopia, and astigmatism, as well as photorefractive keratectomy (PRK), a surface-based alternative for patients with thinner corneas or other anatomical considerations. The practice also offers consultation for candidates exploring whether surgery suits their eyes and lifestyle. Unlike comprehensive optometry practices that focus on prescriptions, contact-lens fittings, and eye-disease management, this clinic's core function is surgical intervention for refractive error.
LASIK at this clinic typically ranges from $1,500 to $3,000 per eye, depending on the complexity of the correction and the laser technology used. PRK costs similarly or slightly more in some cases because it requires longer healing time and sometimes costlier post-operative management. Many patients use health savings accounts or financing plans to manage the upfront cost. Verify current pricing and financing options directly with the clinic, as promotional offers and technology upgrades can shift these figures seasonally.
Initial consultation includes corneal mapping, wavefront analysis, and a detailed eye-health evaluation to determine candidacy. This appointment alone often costs $100 to $200 and may be applied toward surgery if the patient proceeds. The clinic does not typically accept insurance for the procedure itself (most plans classify LASIK as elective), but some employers offer vision benefits or reimbursement programs.
Oklahoma City has several paths to refractive surgery. University of Oklahoma's Department of Ophthalmology offers LASIK through academic clinics with lower pricing (sometimes $1,200 to $2,500 per eye) but longer appointment wait times tied to training and academic scheduling. Ophthalmology practices affiliated with Integris or OU Health systems also perform LASIK, often requiring referrals and incorporating it into broader eye-care relationships; these tend to suit patients who want continuity with a general eye doctor. Independent refractive-surgery centers like LASIK Vision Institute appeal to patients comfortable self-directing their surgery choice and who prioritize convenience and direct access without referral layers.
This clinic is right for adults aged 21 or older with stable vision (unchanged for at least two years), healthy corneas, and realistic expectations about surgical outcomes. Patients with severe dry-eye disease, corneal scarring, or very thin corneas may not be candidates; PRK becomes the alternative for some of these cases. Self-employed individuals and those with HSA accounts often find the upfront investment worthwhile. Patients who prefer a single eye doctor managing both surgical and post-operative care, or those with complex eye diseases requiring close ophthalmology relationships, may benefit more from hospital-affiliated surgical centers where refractive surgery integrates with broader medical eye care.
The initial consultation typically lasts 1.5 to 2 hours. Staff perform automated refraction, corneal topography (mapping the eye's surface shape), and pachymetry (measuring corneal thickness). A physician then reviews these measurements, performs a slit-lamp examination, and discusses candidacy, realistic outcomes, and risks. If you proceed to surgery, a second appointment books the procedure, usually within 1 to 4 weeks. Surgery itself takes 10 to 20 minutes per eye. Post-operative visits occur at one day, one week, and one month to monitor healing and adjust any medications.
Verify hours and location directly with the clinic, as refractive surgery centers sometimes adjust schedules seasonally or with physician availability. Most Oklahoma City surgical centers offer parking on-site or in nearby lots. Plan for someone to drive you home after surgery; you cannot operate a vehicle for 24 hours post-procedure. Many patients take a day or two off work after LASIK; PRK may require a longer recovery window with activity restrictions.
The LASIK Vision Institute addresses a specific gap in Oklahoma City's vision-care landscape for patients confident in elective surgery and willing to bypass the referral pathway that ties many surgical decisions to ongoing ophthalmology relationships.
