LASIK in Dallas-Fort Worth typically costs between $1,500 and $3,500 per eye, depending on the technology used, the surgeon’s experience, and what’s included in your quoted price. At Visionary Eye Surgery in Plano, I believe in transparent pricing with no hidden fees, so you know exactly what you’re paying for before you commit.
But here’s what most pricing pages won’t tell you: the cheapest LASIK isn’t always the best deal, and the most expensive isn’t always the best surgery.
Why Does LASIK Pricing Vary So Much Across Dallas-Fort Worth?
Walk into five different LASIK clinics in DFW and you’ll get five different quotes. That’s not because the laser is five different lasers. It’s because what’s bundled into the price changes from office to office.
Some clinics quote a base price that covers the procedure only. Your pre-op testing, your post-op visits, your enhancement if you need one down the road, those are all extra. Other clinics, including mine at Visionary Eye Surgery, bundle everything into one number. Consultations, the procedure, follow-up care for a full year, and enhancements if needed.
So when you’re comparing prices, you’re not always comparing the same thing. A $1,200 per eye quote that doesn’t include your post-op care might end up costing more than a $2,400 per eye quote that covers everything.
What’s the Average Cost of LASIK in Plano and North Texas in 2026?
In 2026, the average cost of all-laser LASIK in the Dallas-Fort Worth area sits around $2,000 to $2,800 per eye for a reputable surgeon using current-generation technology. That number has actually come down over the past decade because there are more surgeons offering it, and the technology has become more accessible.
Dallas-Fort Worth is actually one of the more competitive LASIK markets in the country. More surgeons means more competition, which means better pricing for patients. That’s good news if you live in Plano, Frisco, Allen, McKinney, or anywhere in North Texas.
But I’ll say this plainly: if someone is quoting you $500 per eye, something is off. Either they’re using outdated equipment, or they’re going to hit you with add-on fees that triple the final cost. I’ve had patients come to me after those experiences, confused about why they were charged for things they thought were included.
Does Insurance Cover LASIK in Texas?
Almost never. LASIK is considered an elective procedure by virtually every insurance plan in Texas. That means your medical insurance won’t cover it.
But there are two things that can help. If you have an HSA or FSA through your employer, you can use those pre-tax dollars to pay for LASIK. That’s an immediate savings of 20 to 30 percent depending on your tax bracket. I tell every patient who’s planning ahead to start setting aside HSA funds the year before they want surgery.
Most practices in DFW, including Visionary Eye Surgery, also offer financing. Zero-interest payment plans for 12 to 24 months are common. That brings your monthly cost down to something like $100 to $200, which is probably close to what you’re already spending on contacts and solution every month.
Is Cheaper LASIK Safe?
This is the question I get more than almost any other during consultations in Plano. And the honest answer is: it depends on why it’s cheaper.
If a practice is using a femtosecond laser that’s two generations old, they can charge less because their equipment costs are lower. The surgery still works. But the precision, the customization, the recovery profile, those are all a little bit better with current technology. In 2026, we have topography-guided treatments, advanced wavefront diagnostics, and eye-tracking systems that adjust 500 times per second. That matters.
If a surgeon is doing high volume and can offer competitive pricing because of efficiency, that’s a different story. Volume and experience can be a good thing as long as the surgeon isn’t rushing through your care.
My recommendation: ask what laser platform they’re using, ask what’s included in the price, and ask how many procedures the surgeon has performed. Those three questions will tell you more than the dollar amount ever will.
How Does LASIK Compare to Contacts Over Time?
This is where the math gets interesting. A patient spending $50 a month on daily disposable contacts, plus solution, plus an annual eye exam for a new prescription, is looking at roughly $800 to $1,000 per year. Over 10 years, that’s $8,000 to $10,000. Over 20 years, it’s closer to $20,000.
All-laser LASIK is a one-time cost. Even at the higher end of DFW pricing, you break even in about three years. After that, every year without contacts is money back in your pocket.
I had a patient last year who calculated that she’d spent more on contacts over 15 years than her friends spent on their used cars. She probably wasn’t exaggerating by much.
What Should I Ask During a Free LASIK Consultation?
If you’re shopping around in Dallas-Fort Worth, here’s what to pay attention to. Ask if the quoted price includes pre-operative testing, the procedure, all post-operative visits, and enhancement surgery if needed within a certain window. Ask about the surgeon’s experience and whether they’ll be the one doing your procedure or if it’s handed off. Ask about the patient guarantee.
At Visionary Eye Surgery in Plano, I do every consultation and every procedure myself. I think that matters. You should be able to look your surgeon in the eye before they use a laser on it.
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