5 Comments Already

Brian G Said,
June 11th, 2008 @9:19 am  

It is cosmetic and not deductible.

StephenWeinstein Said,
June 12th, 2008 @9:41 pm  

You can deduct it if it is to correct “defective vision”. LASIK is mentioned by name at as being for the correction of bodily disfunction and therefore a legitimate medical expense that may be deducted. For tax purposes, “cosmetic” surgery is surgery that is to make you look better to others (facelifts, ****** implants, etc.), not surgery to help you see normally.

a. “You can include in medical expenses the amount you pay for eye surgery to treat defective vision, such as laser eye surgery or radial keratotomy. ”
b. “…laser eye surgery is allowed under § 213(d)(9) because the surgery is a procedure that meaningfully promotes the proper function of the body. Vision correction with eyeglasses or contact lenses qualifies as medical care. See Rev. Rul. 74-429, 1974-2 C.B. 83. Eye surgery to correct defective vision, including laser procedures such as LASIK and radial keratotomy, corrects a dysfunction of the body. Accordingly, the cost of the laser eye surgery is an expense for medical care within the meaning of § 213(d) that B may deduct under § 213 (subject to the limitations of that section).”
c. You can deduct “Surgery to improve defective vision, such as laser eye surgery”.
d. “The cost of items such as false teeth, prescription eyeglasses or contact lenses, laser eye surgery, hearing aids, crutches, wheelchairs, and guide dogs for the blind or deaf are deductible medical expenses.”

Judy Said,
June 13th, 2008 @4:56 pm  

You can probably include it as a medical expense. But you can only take medical expenses if you itemize, not if you take the standard deduction. And you can only include in your deductible medical expenses the amount of your medical expenses that is over 7.5% of your adjusted gross income.

Gypsy Girl Said,
June 16th, 2008 @9:27 pm  

Generally, if your insurance paid for it, you can deduct it. Only medically necessary proceedures are deductable. Also, you can only deduct the amount that is more than 7.5% of your AGI. Unless you own a home or made large contributions to charity, you will probably still do better by taking the standard deduction.

LasikExpert Said,
June 18th, 2008 @9:48 am  

Although Lasik is an elective and arguably cosmetic procedure, the IRS had determined that it is a deductible medical expense.

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