LASIK vs. Refractive Lens Exchange

LASIK reshapes your cornea with a laser. Refractive Lens Exchange (RLE) replaces the eye's natural lens with an advanced artificial lens — correcting reading vision and preventing cataracts in the process. They suit very different ages and goals. Berg-Feinfield offers both in Los Angeles, so your recommendation is matched to your eyes, not to the one procedure a clinic happens to sell.

Adult enjoying clear vision without glasses after laser or lens-based vision correction at Berg-Feinfield, Los Angeles
Life without glasses or reading glasses after LASIK or Refractive Lens Exchange at Berg-Feinfield, Los Angeles

The Short Answer

LASIK reshapes the cornea to correct nearsightedness, farsightedness, and astigmatism. It's the go-to for healthy corneas and low-to-moderate prescriptions — usually people in their 20s, 30s, and early 40s who don't yet need reading glasses.

Refractive Lens Exchange replaces the eye's natural lens with a premium artificial lens — the same technique as cataract surgery, done before a cataract forms. Because it swaps the lens itself, RLE can correct the full range of vision including presbyopia (reading vision), and it means you'll never develop cataracts. It's typically the better choice from the mid-40s onward, for high farsightedness, or for people who aren't LASIK candidates. The right choice comes down mostly to your age, your prescription, and whether reading vision is part of the picture.

Compare Side by Side

LASIK vs. RLE — Side by Side

Two very different procedures for two different stages of life. Here's how they compare — and what each difference means for you.

 LASIKRefractive Lens Exchange
How it worksA laser reshapes the corneaThe eye's natural lens is replaced with an artificial lens (IOL)
What's changedThe cornea (front surface)The lens inside the eye
CorrectsNearsightedness, farsightedness & astigmatismThe same — plus presbyopia (reading vision) with a premium lens
Reading vision (presbyopia)Limited — monovision onlyYes — with a multifocal or extended-depth-of-focus lens
Future cataractsStill possible later in lifeEliminated — the natural lens is removed
Typical age18 to early 40sUsually mid-40s and older
Best forHealthy corneas, low-to-moderate prescriptionsPresbyopia, high farsightedness, early cataract, non-LASIK candidates
ProcedureCorneal laser, about 15 minutesLens replacement, one eye at a time, about 15–20 minutes each
RecoverySharp for most by the next morningFunctional in days; vision settles over one to a few weeks
Long-term resultsBoth excellent — RLE additionally removes the need for future cataract surgery

The single biggest factor is usually age and reading vision. If you're under about 45 with healthy corneas, LASIK is often ideal; from the mid-40s on, RLE's ability to correct reading vision and prevent cataracts frequently makes it the smarter long-term choice. Learn more about RLE.

When LASIK Is the Better Choice

For younger patients with healthy corneas who don't yet need reading correction, LASIK is fast, minimally invasive, and highly effective.

LASIK

Under About 45

If your natural lens still focuses well up close, there's usually no reason to replace it — LASIK corrects the cornea and preserves it.

LASIK

Healthy, Thick Corneas

With adequate corneal thickness and a low-to-moderate prescription, LASIK offers a quick, corneal-only solution.

LASIK

You Want the Least-Invasive Option

LASIK works on the surface of the eye rather than inside it, with a next-day recovery for most patients.

When Refractive Lens Exchange Is the Better Choice

RLE solves problems LASIK can't — especially reading vision and cataract prevention. Learn more about RLE.

RLE

You Need Reading Vision Too

Once presbyopia sets in (mid-40s+), a premium multifocal or extended-depth-of-focus lens can restore both distance and near vision — something LASIK alone can't do.

RLE

High Farsightedness

For strong hyperopia beyond the range LASIK treats well, replacing the lens is often the more effective and stable correction.

RLE

Early Cataract Forming

If a cataract is beginning, RLE addresses your vision and the cataract in one step — you won't need separate cataract surgery later.

RLE

You Want to Never Get Cataracts

Because the natural lens is removed and replaced, a cataract can never form in that eye.

RLE

Not a LASIK Candidate

If thin corneas or a very high prescription rule out LASIK, RLE can still deliver a full range of clear vision.

RLE

Premium Lens Options

Toric, multifocal, and extended-depth-of-focus lenses let us tailor your result. Compare premium lenses.

Both Procedures, One Honest Recommendation

Berg-Feinfield's refractive and lens surgery is led by co-founder Dr. Alan M. Berg, who has performed corneal, refractive, and lens-based surgery in Southern California for more than 30 years — and offers both LASIK and Refractive Lens Exchange.

  • We Offer Both

    Because we perform LASIK, RLE, PRK, and EVO ICL, our recommendation is driven by your eyes and your stage of life — not by the one procedure a clinic is set up to sell.

  • 30+ Years of Experience

    Co-founder of Berg-Feinfield, with decades of corneal, refractive, and cataract-lens surgery experience, and a surgical educator who has trained ophthalmologists nationally.

  • Full Premium-Lens Range

    Toric, multifocal, and extended-depth-of-focus lenses, matched to your eyes and your visual goals for the clearest possible result.

  • Straight Answers

    We'll tell you honestly which procedure suits your eyes and your age — or if you're better served by waiting.

Dr. Alan M. Berg, MD — co-founder of Berg-Feinfield Vision Correction and refractive surgeon, Los Angeles

LASIK vs. RLE — Your Questions Answered

Neither is universally better — it largely comes down to age and reading vision. For people under about 45 with healthy corneas and low-to-moderate prescriptions, LASIK is usually ideal. From the mid-40s onward, or for high farsightedness or an early cataract, RLE's ability to correct reading vision and prevent cataracts often makes it the smarter long-term choice. An evaluation confirms which fits your eyes.
Yes. RLE removes your natural lens and replaces it with an artificial one, so a cataract — which is a clouding of that natural lens — can never form in that eye. For patients approaching the age when cataracts typically develop, this is a meaningful long-term advantage, and it's a key reason RLE is often preferred over LASIK later in life.
Yes — that's one of its biggest advantages. With a premium multifocal or extended-depth-of-focus lens, RLE can restore both distance and near vision, reducing or eliminating the need for reading glasses. LASIK cannot truly correct presbyopia; the closest it offers is monovision, which sets one eye for distance and one for near. If freedom from reading glasses is a priority and you're in the presbyopic age range, RLE is usually the better route.
The technique is essentially the same — the natural lens is removed and replaced with an artificial intraocular lens. The difference is timing and intent: cataract surgery is done once a cataract has clouded the lens, while RLE is done electively, before a cataract forms, to correct vision. Because the procedures are the same, an RLE patient never needs cataract surgery afterward.
LASIK has the quicker recovery — most patients see clearly by the next morning. RLE is done one eye at a time and recovery is still fast, with functional vision in days and full settling over one to a few weeks per eye. RLE is a more involved procedure because it's performed inside the eye, but it remains an outpatient surgery with a comfortable recovery for most patients.
A refractive evaluation is the only way to know. It measures your prescription, corneal thickness and shape, and the health of your natural lens, and takes your age and visual goals into account. Because Berg-Feinfield offers both procedures — plus alternatives like PRK and EVO ICL — the recommendation you get is based on your eyes. Start with our vision correction self-test.

Find Out Which Is Right for You.

A Berg-Feinfield evaluation measures your eyes and takes your age and goals into account, then gives you an honest recommendation — LASIK, Refractive Lens Exchange, or another option. Five Los Angeles-area locations, one straight answer.