Eye conditions
Chalazion: UK treatment options and when minor surgery is needed

A chalazion is a painless, rubbery lump in the eyelid caused by a chronically blocked meibomian gland. Unlike a stye, it is not primarily infected — it is a sterile granuloma. Most respond to warm compresses over 4–6 weeks; the rest need a minor procedure called incision and curettage.
Stye vs chalazion
A **stye** is acute, tender, red and pus-filled. A **chalazion** is chronic, firm, usually painless and slow to change. Many chalazia begin life as a stye that failed to drain.
First-line treatment
For any lump less than 4–6 weeks old, conservative treatment is the right first step:
- Warm compresses for 10 minutes, four times a day
- Gentle vertical lid massage over the lump after warming
- Daily lid hygiene to reduce the meibomian blockage that started it
- No antibiotics — they do not clear a chalazion
About 50% of chalazia resolve in 4–8 weeks with this routine.
When to consider a procedure
Ask for review by an ophthalmologist if:
- The lump has been present for more than six weeks despite proper conservative care
- It is large enough to press on the cornea and blur vision (astigmatism from lid pressure)
- It is cosmetically bothersome
- It keeps recurring in the same spot — biopsy is occasionally indicated to rule out rare eyelid tumours
Incision and curettage
The definitive treatment is a 15-minute in-office procedure under local anaesthetic:
1. Anaesthetic drops, then a small injection into the lid
2. A clamp everts the lid so the surgeon works from inside — no visible scar
3. A small vertical incision is made in the tarsal plate and the chalazion contents are scraped out
4. An eye pad is worn for a few hours; bruising settles over a week
Recurrence at the same site is under 10% in experienced hands.
Steroid injection — an alternative
Small chalazia in cosmetically sensitive positions can be shrunk with a low-dose triamcinolone injection. Two-thirds resolve; the main downside is a small risk of skin depigmentation, so injection is used with caution in darker skin types.
NHS vs private treatment
NHS waiting times for chalazion surgery are often 6–12 months. Private incision and curettage is available same-week and typically costs £450–£750 per lid.
Book a consultant-led chalazion assessment
For persistent lid lumps, book a consultation with my private practice or call **020 3137 3237**. Same-week assessment and treatment across our UK clinics.
Frequently asked questions
- Will a chalazion go away on its own?
- About half resolve within 4–8 weeks with warm compresses and lid hygiene. The rest usually need incision and curettage.
- Is chalazion surgery painful?
- No — a small local anaesthetic injection numbs the lid completely. Most patients describe the procedure as short and painless.
- Will there be a scar?
- The incision is made on the inner surface of the eyelid, so there is no visible external scar.
- Can a chalazion be cancer?
- Very rarely, a persistent or recurrent lump in an older patient can be a sebaceous carcinoma masquerading as a chalazion. This is why unusual or recurrent lesions are sent for histology.
Explore more on Eye conditions
Related reading
- Stye (hordeolum): UK causes, treatment and when to see a doctor
A UK consultant guide to styes — what causes them, how to treat them safely at home, and when a stubborn or recurring lump needs medical care.
- Pinguecula: UK causes, symptoms and treatment options
What that yellow bump on the white of the eye is, why it forms, and when a pinguecula needs treatment or surgical removal.
- Pterygium: UK symptoms, treatment and surgery explained
A UK consultant guide to pterygium — the fleshy growth on the eye that can distort vision — and how modern surgery avoids the old high recurrence rates.
- Proptosis (bulging eyes): UK causes and when to worry
A UK consultant guide to proptosis — one or both eyes appearing to bulge — including thyroid eye disease, tumours and when urgent imaging is needed.
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