Spontaneous expulsive choroidal hemorrhage is described as a sudden accumulation of blood in the potential space between the choroid and sclera, with the source of the blood being the long or short posterior ciliary arteries. It is observed exclusively in the geriatric population with atherosclerotic vessels associated with hypertension.[4] Massive spontaneous choroidal hemorrhage in the absence of surgery or trauma is an infrequent event, described in isolated case reports, and it results in devastating vision loss.[8] We report a case of a 74-year-old patient with uncontrolled hypertension with a sudden loss of vision in the left eye, later diagnosed as spontaneous expulsive choroidal hemorrhage. The patient was treated conservatively with topical steroids, cycloplegics, antibiotics, antiglaucoma medications, and tight bandages with nil visual prognosis. The patient initially refused surgical management and got discharged against medical advice. However, having been mentally prepared, the patient underwent evisceration at a tertiary eye care center nearby.