Cost Disclaimer: Vision care costs vary significantly by provider, location, and insurance coverage. Prices shown are national averages for 2024–2025. Always get quotes from multiple providers and verify coverage with your insurer before scheduling treatment. This site does not provide medical advice.

Your glasses prescription and your contact lens prescription aren’t the same number. That’s not a billing trick — it’s optics. The vertex distance correction, your corneal curvature, the specific lens diameter, and the way a soft lens drapes across your eye all factor into a contact lens prescription that glasses refraction alone doesn’t capture. That’s why practices charge a separate fitting fee. It’s a different measurement and a different clinical service.

Most patients are surprised by this distinction. You paid for an eye exam. You expected to walk out with contacts. Instead there’s a second line on the receipt for $75–$150 that nobody mentioned during scheduling. Here’s what you’re actually paying for — and when it’s worth asking whether you can skip it.

What a Contact Lens Fitting Actually Includes

A contact lens fitting isn’t a 5-minute afterthought to your exam. It involves several distinct steps:

Keratometry measures your corneal curvature — the base curve your lens needs to match for proper centration and movement. This is separate from refraction.

Lens selection means your optometrist picks a trial lens that matches your prescription, corneal curvature, and lifestyle. Soft spherical, toric, multifocal, daily, and monthly lenses all have different parameters, and the “right” lens isn’t automatic.

Slit-lamp evaluation assesses how the lens sits on your eye — centration (is it centered?), movement (does it move a small, appropriate amount on each blink?), and coverage (is the entire cornea covered?). A lens with good fit on paper can still move too much or too little on your specific eye.

Best corrected visual acuity in the lenses confirms you’re actually seeing well with the contact prescription — because what works in the phoropter doesn’t always translate identically to a lens on your eye.

Trial period typically gives you 1–2 weeks to wear the lenses in real conditions, often with 1–3 follow-up visits included in the fitting fee.

Fitting Fee by Lens Type

Lens TypeFitting FeeWhy It Costs What It Does
Soft spherical (single vision)$50–$100Standard fitting, most patients
Toric (astigmatism correction)$75–$150More complex fit; lens orientation matters
Multifocal (presbyopia)$100–$200Multiple focal zones; more trial-and-error
Specialty soft (high Rx, irregular cornea)$150–$300Custom parameters; more fitting visits
Scleral lenses$200–$500+Extensive trial process; often 2–4 fitting appointments
Orthokeratology (overnight reshaping)$300–$800Mapping, multiple lens designs, monitoring

Soft spherical single-vision lenses — the kind most younger patients with nearsightedness wear — have the simplest fitting process. Toric lenses for astigmatism cost more because lens axis orientation matters: if the lens rotates on your eye, your vision blurs. Multifocal contacts require more back-and-forth to dial in the near and distance balance. Scleral lenses, used for keratoconus and severe dry eye, involve a completely different fitting approach — and the fee reflects that.

Why Practices Charge Separately (and Who Doesn’t)

The AOA’s position is that a contact lens fitting is a separate professional service from a comprehensive eye exam or refraction. Both activities require professional judgment and time. Most private optometry practices charge for both independently.

Not all practices do. Costco Optical, for example, typically includes the contact lens fitting in the total exam package or charges a nominal flat fee. Some independent ODs bundle it when you purchase your annual lens supply through them. It’s worth asking at scheduling — a simple “does your exam fee include the contact lens fitting?” saves the surprise.

Does Your Vision Insurance Cover the Fitting?

Most vision plans (VSP, EyeMed, Spectera, Davis Vision) include an allowance for contact lens exam/fitting as part of the contact lens benefit — separate from the eyeglass allowance. Check your Explanation of Benefits: you’ll typically see a line for “contact lens evaluation” covered at $0–$30 co-pay, plus a contact lens allowance ($130–$200) toward the lenses themselves. If you’re not using vision insurance contacts coverage, you may be leaving $150–$200 on the table each year.

Annual Supply Costs: Daily vs. Monthly

Once you’re fit, the ongoing cost is the lenses themselves. The fitting fee is typically one-time per lens type (though it may be repeated when you switch categories).

Lens FormatTypical Annual Cost
Daily disposables (1-day)$300–$600/year for both eyes
2-week disposable$150–$300/year
Monthly disposable$100–$250/year
Toric or multifocal daily$400–$800/year

Daily disposables cost more annually but eliminate the solution routine and offer the cleanest corneal environment — lowest infection risk. Monthly lenses cost less per lens but require nightly cleaning and disinfection with solution ($50–$100/year extra).

The FTC Contact Lens Rule: Your Right to Your Prescription

Under the FTC Contact Lens Rule, your eye care provider must give you a copy of your contact lens prescription at the end of the fitting — without requiring you to purchase lenses from them, without charging an extra fee, and without your having to request it. The prescription must include:

  • Your power in each lens
  • Base curve
  • Diameter
  • Brand (or equivalent)
  • Expiration date

You can take that prescription to 1-800 Contacts, Clearly, Costco, or any licensed online retailer. State law sets expiration at 1–2 years — after which you’ll need a new exam and fitting to order legally.

⚠ Watch Out For

Buying contacts without a valid prescription isn’t just a regulatory issue — it’s a safety one. Contact lenses are FDA Class II medical devices. Wearing lenses with an outdated or estimated prescription increases risk of corneal abrasion, infection, and in severe cases, permanent scarring. Ordering from overseas retailers that don’t verify prescriptions skips the safeguard that protects your corneal health. The annual exam cost is worth it.

Bottom Line

A contact lens fitting adds $50–$200 to the cost of your eye exam. For standard soft spherical lenses, expect $50–$100. Toric and multifocal fittings run $75–$200. Specialty fittings (sclerals, orthoK) start at $200 and go up. Most vision insurance plans cover at least part of the fitting under the contact lens benefit. The fitting fee is a legitimate professional service — what you’re getting is a clinically verified prescription, a confirmed fit under slit-lamp observation, and trial lenses. It’s not a billing convenience. It’s the difference between a lens that works and one that damages your cornea.

Frequently Asked Questions

VisionCostGuide Editorial Team

Vision Cost Writer

Our writers collaborate with licensed optometrists and ophthalmologists to ensure all cost and health-related content is accurate, current, and useful for American eye care patients.