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Corneal Transplant in Thailand: Cost, Top Specialists & Hospitals

Replacing damaged corneal tissue with healthy donor tissue to bring the world back into focus.

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When the cornea becomes clouded, scarred, or warped beyond what glasses or contacts can fix, a corneal transplant replaces the damaged tissue with healthy donor cornea. Modern selective techniques replace only the affected layer — faster healing, lower rejection rates, and better visual outcomes than full-thickness transplants of the past. Thailand's corneal surgeons perform both partial and full-thickness techniques at JCI-accredited hospitals with access to accredited international eye banks.

Procedure 1–2 hours
Hospital Stay Day procedure
Recovery 3–12 months (gradual)
Minimum Stay 10–14 days
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What Is Corneal Transplant?

Corneal transplantation replaces part or all of a damaged cornea with healthy donor tissue from an accredited eye bank. It treats keratoconus, Fuchs dystrophy, corneal scarring from infection or trauma, and clouding that no longer responds to conservative management.

Selective lamellar techniques such as DSAEK and DMEK replace only the diseased layer, preserving the patient's own healthy tissue. These approaches offer faster visual recovery, fewer sutures, and lower rejection rates than traditional full-thickness penetrating keratoplasty. Donor tissue is sourced from accredited eye banks meeting rigorous international safety standards.

Common Concerns Corneal Transplant Can Address

  • Cloudy or hazy vision not correctable with glasses or contacts
  • Corneal scarring from infection, injury, or previous surgery
  • Progressive keratoconus causing increasingly distorted vision
  • Corneal swelling or oedema from Fuchs endothelial dystrophy

Are You a Good Candidate?

  • Diagnosed with a corneal condition requiring transplantation
  • Failed conservative treatments including glasses, contacts, or cross-linking
  • Willing to commit to a longer recovery timeline and ongoing drop regimen

Why Choose Thailand for Corneal Transplant?

Corneal transplant requires both surgical expertise and reliable access to quality donor tissue. Thailand's corneal surgery centres have both, with established relationships with accredited international eye banks.

Specialist

Experienced Corneal Surgeons

Our partner surgeons are fellowship-trained in corneal surgery and perform both PK and endothelial keratoplasty regularly. They handle complex cases including regrafts and post-trauma reconstruction.

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Substantial Cost Advantage

Corneal transplant in Thailand costs 40–60% less than in the US, UK, or Australia. Donor tissue fees are comparable globally — the savings come from lower surgical and facility costs.

Shorter Wait

Reduced Wait Times

Donor tissue availability through international eye banks means shorter wait times than many domestic healthcare systems. Scheduling is measured in weeks rather than months.

Extended Care

Thorough Follow-Up

Corneal transplant recovery is long — months, not weeks. Your Thai surgical team coordinates closely with your home ophthalmologist to ensure continuity of monitoring and medication management.

Corneal Transplant Cost in Thailand

We do not charge for our service — you pay the hospital directly with no markup. Corneal transplant costs include donor tissue, which accounts for a significant portion of the total.

🇹🇭 Thailand $5,500 – $12,100 (฿193,000–฿424,000)
🇺🇸 United States $13,800 – $22,000
🇦🇺 Australia A$12,600 – A$20,900
🇬🇧 United Kingdom £11,000 – £19,300

Your Quote Will Include

  • Board-certified ophthalmologist fee
  • Donor corneal tissue and eye-bank fees
  • Anaesthesia and operating theatre
  • Hospital facility and nursing care
  • Post-operative medications and follow-up
  • Dedicated care coordinator

Prices are approximate and vary by technique, surgeon, and hospital. Your personalised quote will include a full cost breakdown.

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Average Cost of Corneal Transplant in Thailand

Corneal transplant in Thailand typically costs between $5,500 and $9,900. The range depends on the type of transplant — endothelial keratoplasty and PK have different surgical costs — and the donor tissue fee. DMEK tissue preparation may carry a small premium over DSAEK at some centres due to its technical demands.

Cost Breakdown

The total includes the corneal surgeon's fee, donor corneal tissue and eye-bank fees, anaesthesia, operating theatre, hospital stay, post-operative medications including steroid and antibiotic drops, and follow-up appointments during your stay. Donor tissue fees are a significant component and are comparable globally.

What Affects the Price?

The type of transplant, the source and quality of donor tissue, and the complexity of the case all affect pricing. Regrafts cost more than primary transplants due to longer surgical time and greater complexity. PK and DALK cases with extended suturing add to theatre time. The eye bank fee for screened, quality-checked donor tissue is relatively fixed.

Cost by Corneal Transplant Type

Pricing varies by the complexity and scope of the procedure. Typical ranges at our partner hospitals in Thailand:

  • DSAEK (endothelial transplant): $5,500–$7,000 — partial-thickness graft replacing only the inner endothelial layer
  • DMEK (Descemet membrane transplant): $6,500–$8,000 — thinnest possible endothelial graft for faster visual recovery
  • Penetrating keratoplasty (full-thickness transplant): $7,500–$9,900 — complete corneal replacement for advanced scarring or keratoconus

Exact pricing is confirmed after your consultation and treatment plan are finalised.

Thailand vs International Price Comparison

Corneal transplant in Thailand costs 40–60% less than in the US ($13,800–$22,000), Australia (A$12,600–A$20,900), and UK (£11,000–£19,300). Donor tissue costs are comparable worldwide. The savings come from lower surgical, anaesthesia, and facility fees at JCI-accredited Thai hospitals.

Types of Corneal Transplant in Thailand

The type of transplant depends on which layers of the cornea are affected. The trend in corneal surgery is toward selective, partial-thickness transplants that replace only the diseased layer — preserving more of the patient's own tissue and speeding recovery.

Penetrating Keratoplasty (PK)

Full-thickness transplant replacing the entire central cornea. The standard approach when disease affects all layers — advanced keratoconus with scarring, full-thickness opacities from trauma, or failed previous grafts. Sutures remain for 12–18 months. Visual recovery takes the longest of any transplant type.

  • Required when disease affects all corneal layers
  • Sutures stay in place for 12–18 months as the graft integrates
  • Longest visual recovery but broadest applicability
  • Best for: advanced keratoconus with scarring, full-thickness opacities, or failed previous grafts

DSAEK / DMEK (Endothelial Keratoplasty)

Partial-thickness transplant replacing only the innermost endothelial layer. DMEK transplants a single cell layer for the fastest visual recovery. DSAEK includes thin stromal support for easier surgical handling. Both are the standard of care for Fuchs dystrophy and other endothelial disorders.

  • Replaces only the diseased endothelial layer — preserves the patient's stroma
  • Faster visual recovery and lower rejection rates than full-thickness PK
  • DMEK offers the sharpest visual outcomes; DSAEK is more forgiving surgically
  • Best for: Fuchs dystrophy, bullous keratopathy, and other endothelial disease

Corneal Transplant Techniques Used in Thailand

The surgical approach is determined by which corneal layers are affected. Selective transplants that replace only the diseased layer have become the preferred approach wherever possible, offering better outcomes with less surgical trauma.

DMEK Technique

Descemet membrane endothelial keratoplasty transplants just the endothelial cell layer — the thinnest possible graft. Tissue preparation is technically demanding, and the graft must unfold correctly inside the eye. Visual recovery is faster and outcomes are sharper than any other transplant type. Leading Thai corneal surgeons have adopted DMEK as their standard for endothelial disease.

  • Sharpest visual outcomes of any corneal transplant technique
  • Fastest recovery — most patients achieve good vision within weeks to months
  • Lowest rejection rate due to minimal transplanted tissue
  • Best for: Fuchs dystrophy and other isolated endothelial disease

Deep Anterior Lamellar Keratoplasty (DALK)

Replaces the anterior corneal stroma while preserving the patient's own endothelium. Used for stromal disease such as keratoconus scarring where the endothelium is healthy. Preserving the patient's endothelium eliminates endothelial rejection and gives the graft better long-term survival.

  • Preserves the patient's healthy endothelium — eliminates endothelial rejection
  • Better long-term graft survival than full-thickness PK for stromal disease
  • Technically more demanding than PK but clinically superior when feasible
  • Best for: keratoconus with scarring and other anterior stromal disease

Corneal Transplant Recovery Timeline (Thailand)

Days 1–3

Eye patching and a protective shield worn overnight. Frequent antibiotic and steroid drops begin. Mild discomfort and light sensitivity are typical. Graft position is verified within 24 hours — particularly important for DSAEK and DMEK where the tissue must remain adherent.

Weeks 1–4

Gradual improvement in comfort and light tolerance. Follow-up appointments before you travel home confirm graft clarity and position. Steroid drops continue on a tapering schedule. Avoid rubbing the eye, heavy lifting, and dusty environments.

Months 1–6

Vision improves progressively as the graft heals and corneal swelling resolves. Sutures remain during this period for PK. DMEK patients may reach stable vision earlier. Regular monitoring at home is essential for graft clarity and pressure.

Months 6–12

Stable visual outcome becomes apparent. Selective suture removal may begin for PK. Glasses or contact lens fitting once refraction stabilises. Low-dose steroid drops may continue long-term to reduce rejection risk.

Restored Clarity Clear cornea replaces damaged tissue
High Graft Survival Over 90% survival at five years
Gradual Improvement Best vision reached over 3–12 months

When Can You Fly After Corneal Transplant?

Most patients can fly home 10–14 days after surgery, once early graft clarity and position have been confirmed at follow-up. Flying does not affect the graft. You will need to continue your drop regimen during travel and for many months afterward. Arrange follow-up with your local ophthalmologist before departure.

Long-Term Drop Regimen

Most corneal transplant patients use low-dose steroid drops for at least a year and often indefinitely to reduce rejection risk. The tapering schedule is provided at discharge and adjusted by your home ophthalmologist based on graft appearance and pressure. Compliance with this regimen is the single most important thing you can do to protect your graft long-term.

When Will You See Final Results?

DMEK patients often notice significant improvement within weeks. PK patients typically wait months as the graft heals and sutures are gradually removed. Full visual stabilisation for PK may take 12–18 months. Glasses or specialty contact lenses are usually needed after PK for residual astigmatism. DMEK and DSAEK produce less astigmatism.

Risks and Safety of Corneal Transplant

Corneal transplantation is one of the most successful tissue transplants performed, but graft rejection remains the primary concern. Understanding the warning signs and adhering to the drop schedule are the most important long-term actions.

  • Graft rejection — the most important risk, often reversible with prompt steroid treatment
  • Graft infection — minimised by antibiotic prophylaxis and careful wound care
  • Raised intraocular pressure from long-term steroid use
  • Persistent or irregular astigmatism, particularly after full-thickness PK
  • Graft failure requiring regraft
  • Wound leak or suture-related issues

The RSVP rule — Redness, Sensitivity to light, Vision loss, Pain — describes the warning signs of graft rejection. Any of these should prompt urgent ophthalmic assessment. Early detection is critical because rejection episodes caught early respond very well to intensive steroid drops.

Is Corneal Transplant Safe in Thailand?

Yes. Thailand's corneal surgery centres hold JCI accreditation and source donor tissue from accredited international eye banks with rigorous screening standards. Our partner surgeons are fellowship-trained in corneal surgery and perform both selective and full-thickness techniques. Post-operative monitoring protocols follow international guidelines.

How to Reduce Rejection Risk

Adhere to your steroid drop schedule without exception. Learn the RSVP warning signs — Redness, Sensitivity, Vision loss, Pain — and seek immediate ophthalmic assessment if any appear. Regular monitoring of graft clarity, pressure, and endothelial cell count by your local ophthalmologist catches problems before they become irreversible.

What If the Graft Fails?

Regrafting is possible and is performed routinely. Success rates for repeat transplants are slightly lower than for first grafts but remain good, especially with modern endothelial techniques. If your graft fails, your surgeon will discuss the options — which may include a different transplant approach the second time around.

Top Corneal Surgeons & Clinics in Thailand

Corneal transplant requires subspecialist training and access to quality donor tissue. Here is what distinguishes our partner centres.

Leading Corneal Surgery Centres in Bangkok

Our partner hospitals have dedicated corneal surgery departments with slit-lamp biomicroscopy suites, Scheimpflug and anterior segment OCT imaging, specular microscopy for endothelial assessment, and established relationships with accredited international eye banks. These are active corneal surgery centres, not general eye hospitals performing occasional transplants.

Experienced Corneal Surgeons

Our partner surgeons are fellowship-trained in corneal surgery and external disease. They perform PK, DALK, DSAEK, and DMEK regularly, and have experience with complex regraft cases. Surgical technique in corneal transplant — particularly for DMEK tissue handling — requires both training and ongoing volume to maintain. Our partners have both.

What to Look for in a Corneal Surgeon

Ask about the surgeon's specific experience with the transplant type recommended for your condition. If DMEK is recommended, ask how many they have performed and what their rebubbling rate is — a low rebubbling rate indicates good tissue handling. Check that donor tissue is sourced from accredited eye banks with published screening standards. Corneal transplant is a long-term commitment — choose a surgeon you trust for the initial surgery and the ongoing management relationship.

Before and After Results

Corneal transplant results develop gradually. The speed and quality of visual recovery depend on the transplant type and the condition being treated.

Typical Results

Graft survival at five years exceeds 90% for most indications. DMEK for Fuchs dystrophy produces the fastest and sharpest visual recovery. PK for keratoconus has excellent long-term graft survival — many grafts last 20+ years. Most patients achieve significantly improved vision, though glasses or specialty contacts may be needed for optimal correction.

What Results Can You Expect?

Your surgeon will set expectations based on the underlying condition, the transplant type, and the health of the remaining ocular structures. Patients with healthy retinas and no other eye disease have the best visual potential. The consultation covers both the likely outcome and the timeline — which for corneal transplant is measured in months, not weeks.

Planning Your Trip to Thailand for Corneal Transplant

Corneal transplant requires 10–14 days in Thailand for the surgery and early post-operative monitoring. Long-term follow-up continues with your local ophthalmologist at home.

How Long to Stay in Thailand

Plan for 10–14 days. This covers your pre-operative assessment, the transplant procedure, and several early follow-up appointments to confirm graft clarity, position, and pressure before you fly home. For DMEK and DSAEK, early graft adherence is checked within 24–48 hours.

What Is Included in a Medical Trip

Your care coordinator manages scheduling, hospital transfers, and all follow-up logistics. The surgical quote covers the surgeon, donor tissue and eye-bank fees, anaesthesia, facility charges, post-operative medications, and follow-up appointments. A detailed report and care plan for your home ophthalmologist is prepared before discharge.

Continuing Care at Home

Corneal transplant recovery is a long-term process. Before you leave Thailand, your surgical team prepares a comprehensive handover document including surgical details, imaging, medication schedule, and recommended follow-up frequency. This is sent to your home ophthalmologist to ensure well-managed continuity of care.

Common Questions About Corneal Transplant in Thailand

Everything you need to know before your procedure

10–14 days. This covers assessment, surgery, early graft monitoring, and follow-up before you fly home. Long-term recovery continues with your ophthalmologist at home.

Donor tissue is sourced from accredited international eye banks meeting strict safety and quality standards. Every donor cornea undergoes rigorous screening for infectious disease and tissue viability.

PK replaces the entire cornea — used when all layers are affected. DMEK replaces only the endothelial layer — used for Fuchs dystrophy and similar conditions. DMEK offers faster recovery, less astigmatism, and lower rejection rates.

DMEK patients often notice improvement within weeks. PK patients may take months as the graft heals and sutures are eventually removed. Vision continues to refine gradually.
Nick Peplow

Nick Peplow

REVIEWED BY

Patient Care Director

Last reviewed: March 25, 2026

Medical disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice. Individual results, recovery times, and suitability vary. Always consult a qualified ophthalmologist before making decisions about treatment.

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