ICL Info
EVO ICL · Los Angeles

EVO ICL in Los Angeles

In a market this crowded, one thing actually separates surgeons — how they size the lens. Here’s how to choose well.

In short

Los Angeles has no shortage of EVO ICL providers — so the useful question isn’t “who advertises most,” it’s who sizes the lens most accurately for your eye. That’s what determines your result.

Cutting through a crowded market

From the Westside to the Valley, LA has dozens of refractive practices marketing EVO ICL. Ad spend and star counts don’t tell you who will get your lens size right. EVO ICL itself is well established — a reversible, cornea-sparing lens that corrects high prescriptions and suits dry-eye-prone eyes. The variable that separates a clean result from a lens exchange is sizing.

How to actually compare surgeons

Ask every LA surgeon the same three questions: how many EVO ICLs do you perform, how do you size the lens (imaging + AI, or white-to-white alone), and what is your exchange rate? See choosing a surgeon, learn how sizing works, and the AI agent ICLFit.com built for it.

Candidacy

Most nearsighted adults (EVO ICL is FDA-approved for ages 21–60) with a stable prescription are worth evaluating — especially with high prescriptions, thin corneas, or dry eye. Start with the candidacy guide and next steps.

Common questions from LA patients

There are so many EVO ICL surgeons in LA — how do I choose?

In a big market, marketing volume isn’t a quality signal. The differentiator is how a surgeon sizes the lens: ask whether they use anterior-segment imaging and AI sizing, how many EVO ICLs they perform, and their lens exchange rate. Those answers tell you more than ads or star ratings.

Is EVO ICL good for an active, outdoor LA lifestyle?

Yes — because nothing is worn on the eye and no corneal tissue is removed, EVO ICL suits active, outdoor, and screen-heavy lifestyles, and it’s a good option for dry-eye-prone eyes. Candidacy still depends on a full exam.

How much does EVO ICL cost in Los Angeles?

In the US, EVO ICL typically runs about $4,000–$5,500 per eye, with major metros often at the higher end. Price varies by surgeon and lens type (toric vs non-toric), so ask for an all-in quote at consultation.

Educational content reviewed by ICL surgeons; not a substitute for an in-person evaluation. This page does not endorse a specific practice.