Laser photocoagulation is a safe method for the treatment of retinal disorders. We present a case of a 21-year-old woman with high myopia, retinal detachment in the right eye, and bilateral lattice degeneration. She underwent surgical repair in the right eye followed by bilateral retinal laser therapy. During laser photocoagulation of the left eye, she experienced a generalized tonic-clonic seizure for the first time in her life. She had a positive family history of epilepsy. Neurological examination and brain magnetic resonance imaging findings were normal, but an electroencephalogram revealed epileptogenic discharges, more frequent during photostimulation. She avoided flickering lights during the 2-year follow-up, without seizure recurrence. Approximately 5% of patients with epilepsy have photosensitive epilepsy, of whom a considerable proportion will experience seizures only during exposition to flashing lights. Laser photocoagulation was already successfully employed in an animal model of photosensitive epilepsy. Personal or family history of photosensitivity warrants a neurological consultation before retinal treatment with laser therapy.