The Cost of Glasses, By the Numbers
What a four-layer view of eyewear cost looks like when you line up 22 cost items across 6 categories next to the 15-item FSA/HSA eligibility table. Costs are indicative ranges as of 2026-06-12, not quotes.
Indicative ranges, not quotes. Every dollar figure here is a typical range as of 2026-06-12, observed from public retailer and industry references and cited on the page — not a guaranteed price. Real cost depends on your prescription, retailer, frame and region. This is informational cost guidance, not medical, prescription or optometric advice — see an eye-care professional for a prescription and exact fit.
Indicative cost ranges by category
| Category | Items | Typical range |
|---|---|---|
| Lens type | 4 | $15–600 |
| Lens material | 5 | $0–250 |
| Coating / add-on | 8 | $0–250 |
| Frame tier | 3 | $8–1000 |
| Service | 1 | $50–250 |
| Complete pair | 1 | $200–600 |
On the eligibility side, 11 of 15 item-by-item calls are FSA/HSA-eligible, 3 are not, and 1 depends on the plan — with 6 grounded directly in IRS Publication 502. The dataset also carries 7 generic vision-insurance structure rows, 3 non-insurance ways to save, and 6 frame-measurement references.
Frequently asked questions
Where do the cost figures come from?
They're indicative typical ranges observed from public retailer and industry references on 2026-06-12 (Vision Center, All About Vision, Warby Parker, Transitions and others), each cited — never a fabricated single price.
Where does the FSA/HSA eligibility come from?
The core eligibility calls are grounded in IRS Publication 502; the rest follow standard FSA/HSA-administrator practice. Informational, not tax or medical advice.