PURPOSE: To describe the ocular and systemic phenotype in IQCB1-related disease. METHODS: Four cases (3 males, 1 female) with molecularly confirmed IQCB1-related disease underwent ophthalmological examination including best-corrected visual acuity (BCVA) measurement, fundus evaluation, electroretinography (ERG), and spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT). Systemic evaluation including abdominal ultrasound was performed in all cases. RESULTS: BCVA ranged from perception of light (Case-2; 1 year) to 20/125 (Case-1; 9 years). Fundus evaluation showed whitish or silvery reflex outside the vascular arcades in all cases; the reflex was circumferential, irregular and covered at-least 6 clock hours at younger ages (3 cases; 1–4 years). The reflex was less conspicuous with increasing age (Case-1 (9 years) and Case-4 (20 years)). The peripheral retinal SD-OCT scans showed evidence of extensive deposition at the level of retinal pigment epithelium with complete absence of overlying photoreceptor outer segments and myoid zone. The ERG was non-detectable in all cases. All cases harbored biallelic nonsense (p.R364*, p. R455*) or frameshifting (p.M370Yfs*49, p.C253Afs*9) mutations in IQCB1. Case-1 additionally had developmental delay, hemi-hyperplasia, toe syndactyly, and kidney cysts. CONCLUSION: IQCB1-related syndromic or non-syndromic Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) carries unique retinal characteristics which helps differentiate IQCB1-retinopathy from other genetic forms of LCA in childhood.