When the retina separates, time is everything. Prompt surgery preserves the sight that delay would take.
Retinal detachment is a medical emergency. The retina peels away from its blood supply at the back of the eye, and without surgery, permanent vision loss follows. The good news is that modern microsurgical techniques reattach the retina successfully in over 90% of first operations. Thailand's vitreoretinal surgeons handle these cases routinely, with the full range of surgical options available at JCI-accredited hospitals.
Free, no-obligation — you pay the hospital directly with no markup.
Retinal detachment surgery reattaches the retina to the underlying tissue, sealing tears and restoring nutrient flow to keep retinal cells alive. The approach depends on the type, location, and complexity of the detachment. Time is critical — if the macula detaches, the prognosis for central vision drops significantly.
Three principal techniques exist. Pars plana vitrectomy is the most common, removing the vitreous and using gas or silicone oil to hold the retina flat while it heals. Scleral buckle supports the retina from outside the eye. Pneumatic retinopexy is the least invasive option for selected superior detachments. The surgeon chooses based on detachment anatomy, not preference.
Retinal detachment surgery requires specialist vitreoretinal training and high-end microsurgical equipment. Thailand's major eye hospitals have both, and they can mobilise quickly for urgent cases.
Subspecialist
Fellowship-Trained Retinal Surgeons
Our partner surgeons hold vitreoretinal fellowships and manage the full spectrum of retinal detachment — from straightforward single-break cases to complex proliferative detachments.
40–60%
Significant Cost Savings
Retinal detachment surgery in Thailand costs 40–60% less than equivalent procedures in the US, UK, or Australia. The microsurgical equipment and surgical protocols are the same.
Urgent
Rapid Surgical Access
For macula-on detachments, surgery should happen within 24–48 hours. Our partner hospitals can schedule emergency vitreoretinal surgery at short notice when the clinical urgency demands it.
Supported
Full Recovery Coordination
Retinal detachment recovery is demanding — positioning, multiple follow-ups, and a longer stay. Your care coordinator manages every logistics detail so you can focus entirely on healing.
We do not charge for our service — you pay the hospital directly with no markup. Retinal detachment surgery is among the more complex ophthalmic procedures, and the cost reflects the microsurgical equipment and specialist expertise required.
Your Quote Will Include
Prices are approximate and vary by technique, surgeon, and hospital. Your personalised quote will include a full cost breakdown.
Retinal detachment surgery in Thailand typically costs between $4,000 and $7,200, depending on the technique, complexity, and whether silicone oil tamponade is used. Scleral buckle alone tends toward the lower end. Complex vitrectomy with silicone oil and endolaser sits at the upper end. The quote should specify exactly what is included.
The total includes the vitreoretinal surgeon's fee, anaesthesia, operating theatre with microsurgical equipment, tamponade materials (gas or silicone oil), hospital stay, post-operative medications, and follow-up appointments. If silicone oil removal is needed later, this is a separate procedure with its own cost.
Complexity is the primary driver. A straightforward vitrectomy with gas tamponade costs less than a complex case with membrane peeling, silicone oil, and extended operative time. Whether general or local anaesthesia is used also affects the total. Scleral buckle surgery may cost slightly less than vitrectomy.
Pricing varies by the complexity and scope of the procedure. Typical ranges at our partner hospitals in Thailand:
Exact pricing is confirmed after your consultation and treatment plan are finalised.
Retinal detachment surgery in Thailand costs 40–60% less than in the US ($10,000–$16,000), Australia (A$9,200–A$15,200), and UK (£8,000–£14,000). The surgical equipment, tamponade materials, and sterile protocols are identical. The savings come from lower surgeon and facility fees at JCI-accredited hospitals.
The choice of technique depends on detachment anatomy — where the breaks are, whether the macula is involved, and whether there is proliferative vitreoretinopathy. In complex cases, two techniques may be combined.
The most commonly used approach. Three micro-ports allow instruments to remove the vitreous, flatten the retina, and seal breaks with laser or cryotherapy. A gas bubble or silicone oil tamponade holds the retina in position during healing. Suitable for most detachment types and complexities.
A silicone band sutured to the outside of the eye indents the wall inward to contact the detached retina. Relieves vitreous traction and supports the cryotherapy seal. The buckle stays permanently in place and is not visible. Often preferred for younger patients with clear vitreous.
A gas bubble is injected into the vitreous cavity and the patient positioned so it presses against the retinal tear. Cryotherapy or laser seals the break. The least invasive option, but suitable only for selected superior detachments with a single break or closely grouped breaks.
Modern retinal detachment repair uses small-gauge vitrectomy platforms (23G and 25G) with wide-angle viewing systems that give the surgeon a panoramic view of the entire retina during surgery. Intraoperative OCT is available at leading centres for real-time tissue assessment.
After vitrectomy, a gas bubble is injected to hold the retina flat against the eye wall while the laser or cryotherapy seal heals. Different gas types (SF6, C3F8) provide different durations of tamponade — from 2 weeks to 8 weeks. You cannot fly while gas is present because cabin pressure causes it to expand dangerously.
For complex or high-risk detachments, silicone oil provides a more permanent internal tamponade. Unlike gas, it does not absorb and typically requires a second short procedure for removal 3–6 months later. The advantage is that you can fly with silicone oil, and it provides stable long-term support.
The eye may be sore and patched. If a gas bubble was used, specific head positioning — face-down or on one side — may be required for much of the day. Exact positioning instructions are given before discharge. Pain is typically mild and managed with prescribed medication.
Discomfort decreases and vision gradually begins to clear, though it remains blurred while a gas bubble is present. Follow-up appointments monitor reattachment. Continue eye drops and positioning as directed.
The gas bubble shrinks and is absorbed. Clear vision expands from the top downward as the bubble reduces. Light activities can resume. Avoid strenuous exercise and heavy lifting. You cannot fly until the gas has fully absorbed.
Most patients see meaningful visual improvement by this stage. The retina continues healing for several months. Recovery depends on whether the macula was involved and how long the detachment was present before surgery. Follow-up with your local ophthalmologist is arranged.
If gas tamponade was used, you absolutely cannot fly until the gas has fully absorbed. Cabin pressure causes the gas bubble to expand, which can dangerously raise eye pressure. Depending on the gas type, this restriction lasts 2–8 weeks. If silicone oil was used, flying is permitted. Your surgeon confirms gas absorption at follow-up before clearing you to fly.
Light desk work may be possible after 2–3 weeks, depending on positioning requirements and visual recovery. Physical exertion, heavy lifting, and contact sports should wait at least 6 weeks. Swimming is off-limits until fully cleared. If face-down positioning is required, that takes precedence over everything else during the first 1–2 weeks.
Visual recovery is gradual and depends heavily on whether the macula was involved. Gas bubble cases see vision clear progressively as the bubble absorbs over 2–8 weeks. Further improvement continues for months as the retina heals. Maximum visual recovery is typically reached by 3–6 months, though some patients continue to improve beyond that.
Retinal detachment surgery is major intraocular surgery. Success rates are high — over 90% reattachment with a single operation — but the procedure carries inherent risks that the surgeon will discuss before you proceed.
The strongest predictor of visual outcome is whether the macula was attached at the time of surgery. Macula-on detachments treated promptly have the best prognosis. Macula-off detachments still benefit from surgery — meaningful visual improvement is achieved in most cases — but the ceiling for recovery is lower. Speed matters.
Yes. Thailand's vitreoretinal centres operate within JCI-accredited hospitals with fully equipped microsurgical theatres, wide-angle viewing systems, and high-speed vitrectomy platforms. Our partner surgeons are fellowship-trained in vitreoretinal surgery and handle the full spectrum of detachment complexity. The surgical outcomes at these centres are consistent with published international benchmarks.
The most important risk-reduction step is speed. If you are diagnosed with a retinal detachment, seek surgical repair as quickly as possible — particularly if the macula is still attached. In Thailand, our partner hospitals can schedule emergency vitreoretinal surgery at short notice. After surgery, adhering to positioning requirements and attending all follow-up appointments are critical for successful reattachment.
Recurrent detachment occurs in approximately 5–10% of cases. If it happens, further surgery — usually vitrectomy with silicone oil — is typically successful. Your surgeon will discuss the likelihood of recurrence based on the complexity of your case. Risk factors include proliferative vitreoretinopathy, very high myopia, and large or multiple breaks.
Retinal detachment surgery requires subspecialist vitreoretinal training — it is not general ophthalmology. Here is what sets our partner centres apart.
Our partner hospitals have dedicated vitreoretinal surgical suites with 23G and 25G small-gauge platforms, wide-angle non-contact viewing systems, endolaser capability, and intraoperative OCT at leading centres. They stock all tamponade options and can handle complex cases including proliferative detachments and giant retinal tears.
Our partner surgeons completed vitreoretinal fellowships at major international or Thai centres and now manage high volumes of retinal detachment cases. That volume is important because complex detachments require judgment that only comes from seeing many variations. A surgeon who handles five detachments a week thinks differently from one who sees five a year.
For macula-on retinal detachments, surgical timing is critical. Our partner hospitals can schedule emergency vitreoretinal surgery at short notice when clinically indicated. Your care coordinator facilitates rapid assessment and admission for urgent cases.
Retinal detachment surgery aims to reattach the retina and preserve as much vision as possible. Outcomes depend primarily on whether the macula was detached at the time of surgery.
Anatomical reattachment is achieved in over 90% of cases with a single operation. If the macula was still attached at the time of surgery, most patients recover excellent central vision. If the macula was already detached, some degree of permanent visual change is common, though meaningful improvement is still expected. The earlier the surgery, the better the outcome.
Your surgeon will discuss the prognosis based on the detachment anatomy, whether the macula is on or off, the duration of the detachment, and whether there is proliferative vitreoretinopathy. These factors determine the realistic range of visual recovery. Understanding this before surgery helps set appropriate expectations.
Retinal detachment requires a longer stay than most eye procedures — typically 10–14 days minimum — due to the intensive follow-up schedule and potential positioning requirements.
Plan for a minimum of 10–14 days. This covers assessment, surgery, critical early recovery including positioning, and multiple follow-up appointments to confirm the retina is reattaching. If gas tamponade is used, you cannot fly until the gas has absorbed — this may extend your stay to 2–8 weeks depending on the gas type used.
Your care coordinator manages all scheduling, hospital transfers, and follow-up logistics. The surgical quote covers the vitreoretinal surgeon, anaesthesia, microsurgical equipment and tamponade, hospital stay, post-operative medications, and follow-up appointments. Positioning aids can be arranged if face-down positioning is required.
Stay close to the hospital during the first 1–2 weeks. If face-down positioning is required, your accommodation needs to support this comfortably. Your care coordinator can arrange appropriate hotels and positioning equipment. As recovery progresses and positioning requirements ease, Bangkok becomes a comfortable place to convalesce — though strenuous activities must wait.
Everything you need to know before your procedure
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.
If you have been diagnosed with a retinal detachment, speak with our team immediately for urgent consultation and surgical planning.
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