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For most of her life, Samantha Fleck, 41, said she felt misaligned with her dark-brown eyes.
“I was roughly around 15, 16, I noticed that something didn’t sit well, and I felt out of place in my own looks,” Samantha, who lives in Sydney, told The Feed.
So for about 20 years, Samantha wore green-coloured contact lenses every day.

After spending ten years searching for a method to permanently change her eye color, Samantha Fleck finally found a solution in keratopigmentation. This innovative procedure permanently alters the iris color by using a laser to deposit a colored dye through a tiny tunnel created in the cornea.

“I always had this vision of changing my eye colour,” she said.
“It’s been a lifelong goal and dream of mine to be myself.”
But with keratopigmentation not available in Australia due to the risks associated with it, Samantha travelled to the US and including flights, accommodation and the $18,000 procedure, spent about $30,000 to have her brown eye colour permanently changed.
Forty minutes later, Samantha had jade-green eyes, with an outline of her original colour still visible, a common outcome in the procedure.

“I’ve always worn green contacts, so people won’t notice any difference between my natural eye color now and the contacts I used to wear,” Samantha explained.

A woman with brown hair and brown eyes is holding a large slice of pizza while smiling

For Samantha, having brown eyes never felt quite right.

However, following her recent procedure, she feels a true sense of self-acceptance.

“When I look in the mirror now, I truly see myself,” she shared.

While LASIK — a laser eye procedure used to improve vision by reshaping the cornea — is used medically, keratopigmentation has been gaining popularity in recent years as a cosmetic trend fuelled by social media.

TikTok and Instagram videos documenting eye-colour “transformations” have amassed millions of views, helping push the procedure into mainstream conversations. But these videos are often littered with comments asking about the cost and the risks.

But the procedure remains out of the picture in Australia, due to the risks associated with it, Chameen Samarawickrama, a Sydney-based ophthalmologist and eye surgeon, told The Feed.
“We do [keratopigmentation] in eyes that are already blind, and because they’re blind, the consequence if anything goes wrong is not that significant,” he said.

“People can go blind, and this is not a reversible procedure.”

People can go blind. And this is not a reversible procedure.

Chameen Samarawickrama, opthalmogolist and eye surgeon

Samarawickrama said the permanent dyes that are put into the eyes are one of the major concerns due to their unknown long-term effects.

“We don’t know whether [the dye] is toxic in the long term, we don’t know whether it’ll fade, whether it’ll scar up. The cornea is responsible for 70 to 80 per cent of the focusing. So, any irregularity that can be caused by the dye will cause loss of vision.”

A man in a grey suit sitting in an office chair in an ophthalmology clinic room

Professor Chameen Samarawickrama from Sydney is warning Australians to reconsider going overseas to have their eye colour changed. Source: SBS / Matt Gazy

A 2018 study published in the British Journal of Ophthalmology suggested a 10-12 per cent risk of complications, Samarawickrama said.

“For what we do, a 10 per cent [risk] is 10 times more than what we would normally expect,” he said.
“This is a high-risk procedure.”
But Samantha weighed it up, and believed the procedure was worth the risk.

“I did as much research as I can and looking from the results of people who’ve done it before me, there’s people who’ve done the procedure two or three years or four years before me and they’ve always updated their process, and it reassured me.”

A growing global trend

Since 2019, New York ophthalmologist Dr Alexander Movshovich has been performing keratopigmentation, with Samantha being one of his former patients.
“I see a lot of happy people because [they suddenly] in 20 minutes become different people.”
He estimates performing about 1,500 procedures in that time at his clinic — but new players in the US as well as countries like Türkiye are now offering the procedure at a cheaper rate.
Ophthalmologists Francis Ferrari and Jorge Alió first performed keratopigmentation in France in 2013, where the technique was shown to other ophthalmologists.

“I actually saw this procedure in [Ferrari’s] hands and then I brought it to America, and I was first in America,” Movshovich said.

A woman with green eyes and a black jumper is hugging a man dressed in blue scrubs and a beard.

Samantha Fleck hugging Dr Alex Movshovich following her procedure in New York. Source: Supplied

He said most people change from dark eyes to green or blue — with around 10 per cent of patients asking for further work after the procedure.

“‘I want to be more, I want to be less’ … some people are hungry for changes. There are some people who just want to do it more and more,” he said.
Movshovich said the procedure has shown no serious complications over six years at his clinic in the US, however short-term side effects include light sensitivity, redness in the eyes and discomfort (which can sometimes turn into long-term complications).
Dr Chandra Bala, another ophthalmologist based in Sydney, has said he has seen Australians express an interest in changing their eye colour, but warned against keratopigmentation.
“People always aspire to that crystal clear eye. But our job is not to do harm first. When you go and do this, you have no idea what’s going to happen,” Bala told The Feed.

He says results can often look unnatural, or “aesthetically displeasing”.

“The texture that you get from it is not of the sophistication of the normal eye. So you have a ‘ghostly’ appearance…”
Bala saw firsthand how things can go wrong, having dealt with a health worker who had undergone keratopigmentation to change the colour of his eyes.

“He was ghostly looking … he now has depression, all sorts of problems,” Bala said.

‘Just put contact lenses on’

Samarawickrama said cosmetic keratopigmentation remains outside mainstream ophthalmology in research and use, meaning it’s unregulated and understudied.
“People are striving for a concept of perfection that doesn’t exist. When the procedure goes wrong, the consequence is blindness — and that’s irreversible,” he said.

“If someone really wants a light colour, they should just put a contact lens on.”

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