- Eye Color Change Clinic
- from inventor of Lumineyes
At MyLumineyes®, we focus on medically controlled approaches to eye color modification, led by
Dr. Mustafa Mete. This page is a clear overview of our clinical pathways and educational resources—so you can
understand what is possible, what is not, and how we prioritize safety, ethics, and patient selection.
If you are exploring eye color change, start with our primary clinical overview, then review eligibility and safety before requesting an evaluation.



This is our main pillar resource explaining the Lumineyes® laser iris depigmentation approach, how results can evolve over time,
what to realistically expect, and why patient selection is the most important factor for safety and satisfaction.
Learn more about Laser Eye Color Change Procedure→
Many people search for “eye color change surgery” as a broad term. Here we clarify the landscape—laser depigmentation,
keratopigmentation, and artificial implants—so you can understand differences in philosophy, reversibility, and risk profile.
Explore Eye Color Change Surgery options →
“Permanent” can mean different things depending on the method. This page explains permanence in a clinical sense:
what may be stable, what may vary, and why safety criteria matter more than marketing language.
Read about Permanent Eye Color Change →
Keratopigmentation is a separate clinical concept with different indications and constraints. We provide an educational overview
so patients can compare medical logic, candidacy, and outcome expectations.
Learn about Keratopigmentation →
Artificial cosmetic iris implantation carries meaningful risks reported in ophthalmic literature and clinical practice.
We outline the risk logic and why many reputable surgeons approach cosmetic implants with extreme caution.
Read about Artificial Iris Implants risks →
The single biggest predictor of a safe journey is appropriate eligibility. Before you request an evaluation, review these:
If you want to learn about Dr. Mete’s background and clinical approach:
Meet Dr. Mustafa Mete →
Important medical note: Any simulation or example imagery is for demonstration only. Individual outcomes may vary and
cannot be guaranteed to match a simulated color exactly. A medical evaluation and eligibility screening are required.

No. They are fundamentally different approaches. Laser depigmentation aims to reduce iris surface pigment under strict selection criteria,
whereas cosmetic implants introduce a foreign device and are typically considered higher-risk in many clinical discussions.
Candidacy is medical—not cosmetic. The safest pathway starts with screening, ocular health review, realistic expectations,
and a careful discussion of risks and follow-up.
No ethical medical practice can guarantee an exact cosmetic shade. Outcomes may vary depending on baseline iris characteristics,
healing response, and individual biology.
Leave your details and one of our experts will contact you!