Laser surgery for myopia is currently a clinically proven and safe procedure for correcting myopia. There are strict indications, and myopic patients who meet the indications for surgery choose it voluntarily. The treatment options available for myopia are frame glasses, corneal contact lenses, keratoconus surgery and intraocular refractive surgery. Corneal refractive surgery is a surgical procedure to change the shape of the cornea to correct refractive error and is suitable for myopic patients who do not want to or whose occupation does not allow optical correction (frames and contact lenses). Currently, the mainstream procedures are: excimer laser subepithelial keratomileusis (LASEK), semi-femtosecond laser surgery (FS-LASIK), and full femtosecond laser small incision lens extraction (SMILE). There are strict indications: age 18-50 years old; stable refractive error for at least two years; preoperative examination indexes met; no other serious eye diseases (e.g. cone cornea, keratitis, glaucoma, etc.); no diabetes, collagen disease and scar body; good psychological quality and willingness to operate, etc. The recovery of vision after surgery is a gradual process, which usually takes more than one month to achieve the best results of stability. Therefore, if myopic patients need it, “laser surgery” is an option.