
- Medically Reviewed by: Mr Mfazo Hove, Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon
- Author: Mr Mfazo Hove
- Published: January 30, 2026
- Last Updated: July 14, 2026
In short. At Blue Fin Vision®, private pterygium removal with the gold-standard conjunctival autograft starts from £2,500 per eye at The Harley Street Eye Centre, our most cost-effective setting. Hospital-theatre treatment may be available at additional cost where clinically appropriate. The value is in the autograft technique, which lowers the chance of the pterygium growing back.
Blue Fin Vision® Pterygium Pricing
Pterygium removal with conjunctival autograft: from £2,500 per eye at The Harley Street Eye Centre. Hospital-theatre treatment may be available at additional cost where clinically appropriate. Your exact fee is confirmed at a consultant-led assessment.
What You Are Really Paying For: A Low Recurrence Rate
Pterygium, sometimes called surfer’s eye, is a benign, wing-shaped growth of the conjunctiva that can extend onto the cornea,¹ and is strongly linked to long-term ultraviolet exposure.² Surgery is the only effective treatment, and the technique matters, because a pterygium can grow back.³ A conjunctival autograft, where the eye’s own healthy tissue covers the bare area, gives a much lower recurrence rate than simple excision,³ and is regarded as the gold standard.⁴
Technique | Typical recurrence | Notes |
|---|---|---|
Conjunctival autograft | Roughly 5 to 10% | Gold standard; the eye’s own tissue covers the bare area |
Simple excision | Roughly 30 to 50% | Higher recurrence; bare-sclera excision higher still |
Recurrence figures are published typical ranges from the surgical literature, not a guaranteed individual outcome.
At Blue Fin Vision®, pterygium removal is consultant-led and uses the conjunctival autograft technique, with careful graft fixation to protect the ocular surface.⁵
What Determines Your Price
Cost reflects whether one or both eyes are treated, the size and extent of the pterygium,⁶ the surgical technique, and the aftercare and follow-up included. A quote should be inclusive: consultation, the autograft procedure and at least a year of aftercare.
Where Your Treatment Takes Place
Most pterygium removal is carried out at The Harley Street Eye Centre, our main and most cost-effective setting. Treatment in a hospital main operating theatre may be available at selected Blue Fin Vision® clinics at additional cost, where clinically appropriate. Your consultant will help you choose the most appropriate and cost-effective setting, and our location pages show current availability.
Is Private Pterygium Removal Available on the NHS?
Pterygium removal may be available on the NHS when the growth significantly affects vision or causes severe symptoms, but access varies and waits can be long. Removal for comfort or appearance, or for the gold-standard autograft technique with prompt access, is usually arranged as private pterygium surgery.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does pterygium grow back after removal?
It can. The conjunctival autograft technique substantially lowers the recurrence rate compared with simple excision,³ but no surgery removes the risk entirely.
Is it cheaper to have simple excision?
A lower headline price for simple excision can cost more overall, because the higher recurrence rate³ may mean further surgery. The autograft is better value for most patients.
Is pterygium removal on the NHS?
Sometimes, if vision or symptoms are significantly affected, though waits can be long. Cosmetic or prompt private removal is self-funded.
Does the location change the price?
Yes. Most treatment is at The Harley Street Eye Centre, our most cost-effective setting. The hospital sites use a main operating theatre, which adds significant cost.
How long is recovery?
The surface is usually comfortable within one to two weeks, with redness settling over the following weeks. Your consultant gives you a tailored aftercare plan.
Book a consultant-led pterygium assessment and receive a tailored plan, an exact price and clear advice on the autograft technique and recovery.
Related Pages
References
- Shahraki T, Arabi A, Feizi S. Pterygium: an update on pathophysiology, clinical features, and management. Ther Adv Ophthalmol. 2021;13:25158414211020152.
- Moran DJ, Hollows FC. Pterygium and ultraviolet radiation: a positive correlation. Br J Ophthalmol. 1984;68(5):343-346.
- Clearfield E, Muthappan V, Wang X, Kuo IC. Conjunctival autograft for pterygium. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016;2(2):CD011349.
- Kaufman SC, Jacobs DS, Lee WB, Deng SX, Rosenblatt MI, Shtein RM. Options and adjuvants in surgery for pterygium: a report by the American Academy of Ophthalmology. Ophthalmology. 2013;120(1):201-208.
- Kheirkhah A, Hashemi H, Adelpour M, Nikdel M, Rajabi MB, Behrouz MJ. Randomized trial of pterygium surgery with mitomycin C application using conjunctival autograft versus conjunctival-limbal autograft. Ophthalmology. 2012;119(2):227-232.
- Rezvan F, Khabazkhoob M, Hooshmand E, Yekta A, Saatchi M, Hashemi H. Prevalence and risk factors of pterygium: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Surv Ophthalmol. 2018;63(5):719-735.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Mr Mfazo Hove
Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon
MBChB MD FRCOphth CertLRS
Mr Mfazo Hove is a Consultant Ophthalmic Surgeon with experience spanning more than 57,000 procedures. He completed 6.5 years of specialist training at Moorfields Eye Hospital and served for five years as a consultant at the Western Eye Hospital, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust. He is the founder of Blue Fin Vision®, a consultant-led private ophthalmology practice operating across London, Essex, and Hertfordshire. His clinical expertise encompasses advanced cataract surgery, refractive lens replacement, laser vision correction, and implantable Collamer lenses (ICL).
A ZEISS Key Opinion Leader, Mr Hove is a respected international speaker with five invited engagements across seven cities in 2026:
- ZEISS China tour (Changsha, Shanghai, and Hangzhou, April – ZEISS APAC User Meeting)
- RCOphth Annual Congress – May – Manchester
- ZEISS EMEA User Meeting (Istanbul)
- ZEISS Lausanne User Meeting (Lausanne)
- European Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgeons Annual Congress (ESCRS, London)


