A carpenter told me he’d been fighting with progressives for three years — never finding the reading zone fast enough when he needed to check a measurement, always tilting his head at the wrong angle on a ladder. His optician finally asked why he hadn’t tried bifocals. He switched, paid $140, and never looked back.
Bifocals have an image problem. People associate them with a certain generation, a certain style of aging. But for specific wearers — particularly those with occupational demands or anyone who’s never fully adapted to progressives — bifocals outperform on both cost and function. The optometrists fitting a lot of vocational prescriptions know this well.
Here’s who should still consider bifocals in 2025, and what they actually cost.
Bifocal vs. Progressive vs. Trifocal: Cost Comparison
| Lens Type | Lens Cost (Pair) | Visible Line? | Near Zone Size | Adaptation Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flat-top bifocal (FT-28, FT-35) | $75–$200 | Yes | Large, fixed | Low |
| Round-top bifocal (Executive) | $100–$225 | Yes | Full bottom half | Very low |
| Trifocal | $100–$250 | Yes (2 lines) | Distance/intermediate/near | Low-moderate |
| Standard progressive | $150–$300 | No | Narrow corridor | Moderate |
| Premium progressive | $300–$600 | No | Wider corridor | Low-moderate |
Bifocals cost $75–$225 less per pair than comparable progressives. Over 5 years of annual new lenses, that’s $375–$1,125 in savings — and that’s before counting the time lost to progressive adaptation problems.
Who Benefits Most From Traditional Bifocals
Vocational and occupational users. A carpenter, machinist, or electrician who needs to look down at close work and up at distance in rapid succession benefits directly from a bifocal’s large, fixed near zone. Progressives require precise head positioning to find the reading corridor — bifocals don’t. The snap-in visual transition of a bifocal is faster and more reliable when you’re working with your hands.
Previous progressive adaptation failures. Roughly 5–10% of people can’t adapt to progressives. The peripheral swim, the need to move the head rather than just the eyes, the narrow corridor at high add powers — these cause real problems for a meaningful minority of wearers. For these patients, bifocals deliver clear distance and near vision without the compromises.
Patients with large add powers. As add power increases past +2.50, progressive corridors narrow and peripheral aberrations worsen. High-add bifocals maintain a large, usable near zone regardless of add power.
Budget-conscious patients with straightforward needs. If you need glasses for driving and reading — nothing more — a bifocal is functionally complete and $150–$300 cheaper than an equivalent progressive.
The visible bifocal line is the main reason people choose progressives — it signals presbyopia to anyone who notices. This is cosmetic, not visual. Optically, the line boundary creates no distortion. Many wearers who switch from frustrating progressives to bifocals are genuinely surprised how quickly they stop seeing the line at all — because they’re no longer fighting to find their focal zone.
Occupational Progressives: A Middle Ground
Task-specific progressives — sometimes called occupational or “near-variable focus” lenses — are a modern option between full progressives and bifocals. They’re optimized for near-to-intermediate distances (roughly 40cm to 2m) rather than full distance-to-near range. They’re excellent for:
- Computer work (intermediate distance is the primary zone)
- Reading-heavy desk work
- Musicians (music stand to instrument to conductor, not to audience)
Cost: $200–$400/pair. More than a bifocal, typically less than a premium full progressive. They’re not for driving — distance vision is sacrificed — so you’d need a separate distance pair.
Trifocals: Three Zones, Two Lines
Trifocals add an intermediate segment between the distance and reading zones. Useful for patients spending significant time at intermediate distances — computer screens, dashboard, music stand — who find full progressives difficult.
Cost: $100–$250/pair — modestly more than bifocals, substantially less than premium progressives. Adaptation is straightforward for most wearers.
Don’t let an optical salesperson push you away from bifocals because they’re “outdated” or because progressives carry higher margin. The right lens is the one that works for your visual demands. If you have an occupational or lifestyle use case where bifocals perform better, ask your optician directly: “Would a bifocal or occupational progressive actually work better for my situation?” A good optician gives you an honest answer regardless of the price difference.
See also: Progressive Lenses Cost for the full progressive pricing and when they’re worth the premium, and Eyeglasses Cost for complete pair pricing at each budget level.
Bottom Line
Bifocal lenses cost $75–$200 — significantly less than progressives. They’re the right choice for occupational users, people who’ve failed to adapt to progressives, and patients with straightforward distance/near needs on a budget. The visible line is a cosmetic consideration, not a functional one. Don’t dismiss bifocals as outdated before considering whether they’d actually serve your vision better — and save you money at the same time.