There have been multiple accounts created with the sole purpose of posting advertisement posts or replies containing unsolicited advertising.

Accounts which solely post advertisements, or persistently post them may be terminated.

I need new glasses. The only insurance-approved place I can shop online will cost $250 with my needs. I went to a "cheap" glasses website that doesn't accept insurance: $250. Yay, America.

The optometrist recommended seamless bifocals. I have a very painful nerve condition in my face (atypical trigeminal neuralgia), so this is what I need with glasses: the lightest weight frames possible- known as ultra light- with the lightest weight lenses possible and automatically darkening lenses so I don’t need the weight of sunglasses. The cheapest frames brought the total to $250 on the site the insurance worked with.

The frames are $20 on the cheap site. Everything else in the cost is the lenses.

As for why I have to buy them online- I don’t want anyone touching my face unless it’s absolutely necessary. The exam was painful enough.

American for-profit healthcare is fucking awesome.

BearOfaTime ,

Yay the conglomerate that owns glasses production and distribution.

It’s not just the US, Essilor is a virtual monopoly.

That said, my glasses are 50% less online than at a local shop.

Also, thank insurance companies for inflating prices

cerement ,
@cerement@slrpnk.net avatar

Essilor monopolizes lenses, Safilo monopolizes frames – neither offer direct sale

teamevil ,

Why is it always luxottica

TotallyNotSpezUpload ,

I understand your frustration. This sucks major league. I know a fairly cheep German glasses company who ship worldwide (production for most glasses worldwide is Thailand, that’s where the company gets their products as well). They’ve got a very generous refund policy as well. If you want to, I can pm you their website.

FlyingSquid OP ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Please do, thank you.

TotallyNotSpezUpload ,

Done under my original comment.

TotallyNotSpezUpload ,

Done under my original comment.

FlyingSquid OP ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Got it. Thanks!

TotallyNotSpezUpload ,

The international (english) site is: Glasses24.com

EleventhHour ,
@EleventhHour@lemmy.world avatar

Can you please post that here publicly so everyone can benefit?

TotallyNotSpezUpload ,

Done under my original comment.

TotallyNotSpezUpload ,

Under my original comment.

Sirence ,

Can you pm me the link as well?

TotallyNotSpezUpload ,

Brille24.de

Unless they hiked up their prices or went out of business in the past 2 years, the link should be grand.

If you need help regarding navigation around the website or how to put in the data for the glasses, please let me know.

Postmortal_Pop ,

Zennioptical.com

I got mine for $30, they can make them mute expensive, but for just glasses, it’s perfect.

CM400 ,

I got mine with their HD lenses, no-line bifocals with antiglare coating, and the total came to $135 shipped.

Postmortal_Pop ,

While my initial reaction to this was “wholly fuck that’s expensive” I realize that all those modifiers would make it close to a grand at a glasses shop.

henfredemars ,

I used them and they were great good-enough glasses.

JimmyBigSausage ,

I have bought at least 10 pair from Zenni optical and they were just fine.

Nougat ,

I have had less than stellar results with Zenni, ymmv

dditty , (edited )

I bought one pair from them and they were pretty crummy. Also getting the pupillary distance is tricky.

Nougat ,

Measuring your own PD is ehhh. You can have the optometrist give you PD at your exam.

shalafi ,

I second this, but OP says they have special lens needs. That’s what stacks the price.

poweruser ,

When I got LASIK I wasn’t allowed to wear contacts for a few weeks before the surgery. I bought the cheapest pair of glasses from Zenni. I had new glasses for $17 + $10 shipping.

If I had to do it again I would have my IPD measured by a proper optometrist first. I just guessed at it and got ones a little too small, so they had a kind of fisheye effect.

Still, for <$30 it was a great bargain

Reverendender ,

Seamless bifocals=Progressives. I got mine at Zenni Optical for like $145 all in.

FlyingSquid OP ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, sorry, that’s what I meant. They used to be called ‘seamless bifocals’ back in the 90s and I still think of them that way.

greenshirtdenimjeans ,

Check out Firmoo, I’ve gotten really cheap prescription glasses on there multiple times.

FlyingSquid OP ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

Never heard of them. I’ll check them out. Thanks.

hakase ,

I always just go to America’s Best. $80 for an eye exam and two pairs of glasses is hard to beat.

FlyingSquid OP ,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

As far as I know, that’s not around here. But the eye exam was only $30, so at least the insurance helped there. It would have only been $10, but they said if I gave them an extra $20, they’d do some imaging thing which meant they didn’t have to dilate my eyes. Totally worth an extra $20.

Bishma ,
@Bishma@discuss.tchncs.de avatar

I’m honestly not sure which frustrates me more. That teeth and eyes are not considered important enough aspects of health to be covered under normal health insurance. Or the shit insurance that’s available even when you pay for additional policies to cover them.

Veedem ,
@Veedem@lemmy.world avatar

The lack of coverage of teeth and eyes in standard health insurance is because of dentists and optometrists opting out when insurance was becoming a thing.

Strider ,

Just to give you a little something:

My glasses cost around 500€ to 700€ per glass (so around 1200€ plus frame) and I have to pay them myself.

Nougat ,

I tried bifocals, and they are just not for me. I work on a computer all day, and having to jog my head around in order to have appropriate focus sucks.

So ... when I go to get an eye exam, I have them give me two prescriptions. One for distance (driving, movies, whatever), and another for about six inches past arm's length - how far away my main monitor is. Then I get two pair of glasses online for ~$40 each, and a pair of distance sunglasses for $50.

I like the distance sunglasses better than transitions lenses, because they're darker than the transitions would ever get. Adding other fancy coatings will certainly increase the price of the lenses, but I think I only did scratch resistant on my regular distance pair, since I'm not doing somersaults while on the computer.

DevCat ,
@DevCat@lemmy.world avatar

This is what I did through Zenni as well. Only, I intend to get a third pair of glasses. The distance at which you read a computer screen compared to a physical book is very different.

teamevil ,

Zenioptical it’s like 75 for every option and I wear them more than the glasses I paid hundreds for

eestileib ,

deleted_by_author

  • Loading...
  • LostXOR ,

    This is a post about glasses. Are you lost?

    eestileib ,

    Fuckin a I’m lost, sorry.

    Death_Equity ,

    I buy from glassesshop, I think the cheapest pair is $50 for frame and lenses. I went all in on the thinnest lenses and transitions, I think it was $150.

    Target optical does vision tests for $75 IIRC, and I go there to get a prescription that I give to glassesshop and pick up a cheap pair and a nicer pair. Still not free.99, but much cheaper than other routes without insurance.

    skyspydude1 ,

    Okay, I’m going to go against the grain here and say “Don’t go with the really cheap online glasses”.

    I used eyebuydirect, Zenni, and a couple of others for many years, and was pretty happy with them, especially for the price. However, one thing I’d always noticed is that they’d wind up being pretty beat up with some large scratches in the coatings, or they’d just fail and start flaking off by around the 1 year mark (I’m pretty hard on my glasses, tbf) and I absolutely had to get new ones. I just kind of accepted that I was very hard on my glasses, and that’s what happens.

    However, I started going to Costco just because my insurance wouldn’t cover any of the online places, and the quality of the lenses and coatings are absolutely night and day. I’ve had 10 pairs now (sunglasses and normal lenses), and only had one with a single scratch in the lenses, after having them go flying across a cement floor due to me doing something quite stupid.

    I don’t think you need a membership for their optical center either, but I’m not 100% sure.

    Ookami38 ,

    I’ve had the exact opposite experience. Last time trying glasses at a local place, they hurt my eyes and couldn’t figure out how to adjust them properly. Every pair I’ve purchased on Zenni has lasted multiple years of me sleeping in them or doing contact sports in them. I still have multiple pairs kicking around my house or car as spares.

    electric ,

    …you sleep with them on? How?

    skyspydude1 ,

    I do this quite a bit too. I can fall asleep insanely quickly, so sometimes I’m just chilling on the couch watching something, and then I’m out. Then when I wake up I have to go digging through my couch to figure out where the heck my glasses went

    tomkatt ,

    I recently went for glasses and eye exam. Near sighted with astigmatism, and now I need bifocals on top of it. Bifocals with line aren’t common now so doctor suggested progressives. I’m fine with that.

    I’m also a special kid who can’t wear polycarbonate lenses because I’m hypersensitive to chromatic aberration. So need Trivex lenses as well. Throw in an anti-glare coating and my cost (with insurance) is like $460.

    The sad part is given my needs and how few carry Trivex in my area, I consider it a decent deal.

    FlyingSquid OP ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    That’s insane. I’m really sorry to hear it.

    tomkatt ,

    Don’t be. I’m fortunate to be able to afford it comfortably, and it’s just part of the cost of living to me. In my 40s now and been wearing glasses since I was 10yo.

    I’m just happy I’ll be able to read fine print and see stuff close again without needing to take off my glasses.

    CherenkovBlue ,

    Expensive lenses are expensive. My glasses also cost about $350 after insurance covers them. I go for all the expensive lenses and digital lens tech because my prescription is quite strong and it improves quality of life, but my vision could be corrected with the basic stuff.

    Maybe your doctor can make the case to your insurance that these are medically necessary to be so lightweight. Otherwise, the improvements are a nicety, not a necessity.

    FlyingSquid OP ,
    @FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

    Except in every other Western nation, where they aren’t expensive.

    VaalaVasaVarde ,

    I would say $250 is fairly cheap, in Scandinavia you can easily pay $1000+ for special lenses.

    For me the cheapest with okay quality costs $500 for a deal with two pairs from SpecSavers.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • [email protected]
  • lifeLocal
  • goranko
  • All magazines