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.

A decade ago, ordering glasses online felt risky. Today, roughly 30% of Americans who wear glasses have bought at least one pair online, and the quality gap between online and brick-and-mortar retailers has largely closed — at least for simple prescriptions.

The catch: not all prescriptions work well with online ordering, and not all online retailers are equal. Here’s the full breakdown on cost, quality, and which situations call for an in-person optical shop instead.

Side-by-Side Comparison of Major Online Retailers

RetailerSingle Vision RangeProgressive RangeAR CoatReturn PolicyInsurance
Zenni$7–$60$37–$100$4.95 add-on30 days (exchange)No direct billing
EyeBuyDirect$6–$60$45–$100$15 add-on14-day returnOut-of-network
GlassesUSA$29–$150$59–$200Included on some14-day returnVSP/EyeMed accepted
Clearly$19–$120$70–$170$19 add-on365-day returnOut-of-network
Warby Parker$95–$250$295–$350Included30-day returnVSP/EyeMed in-store
39DollarGlasses$39–$80$78–$130$15 add-on30 daysOut-of-network

EyeBuyDirect is Zenni’s closest competitor — ultra-budget, enormous frame selection, frequent BOGO deals. Their $6 frame promotions are real. The AR coating add-on ($15 vs. Zenni’s $4.95) makes total costs comparable, so the choice between them often comes down to which frame you like better.

GlassesUSA lands between budget and mid-range and accepts VSP and EyeMed direct billing in some cases — a meaningful differentiator for insured customers who want to order online but use their benefits.

Clearly (originally Clearly Contacts, based in Canada with US operations) stands out for its 365-day return policy on glasses — far more generous than any competitor. That’s a real benefit if you’re nervous about buying progressives or a new prescription online.

Warby Parker is the premium end of the online segment — better frame materials, included AR coating, and a well-developed try-at-home program. They’re also the only fully online retailer with physical stores where you can use VSP/EyeMed in-person.

When Online Ordering Absolutely Works

Online glasses are reliable when:

  • Simple single-vision prescription: Sphere ±4.00 or less, cylinder ±2.00 or less
  • Stable, unchanged prescription: You’ve worn this exact prescription for 6+ months and it feels right
  • Known pupillary distance: Your PD is accurately measured (ideally professionally)
  • Standard frame styles: Nothing requiring unusual fitting adjustments or specialized measurements
  • Backup pair purpose: Spare or secondary glasses where quality standards are lower

When to Go In Person

Prescriptions That Need In-Person Service

Consider going in-person when you have:

  • New prescription (first-time or significant change): Verify accuracy before ordering multiples online
  • Complex progressives: High add powers, narrow corridor requirements, or a history of difficulty adapting to progressives
  • High sphere power (above ±6.00): Lens thickness optimization and high-index selection matter here; professional guidance reduces mistakes
  • Significant prism correction: Prism lenses require precise positioning that online manufacturing can’t reliably guarantee
  • Irregular corneas or post-surgical vision: Standard lens manufacturing may not correct these conditions adequately

Getting Your PD: Don’t Skip This

Your pupillary distance isn’t always printed on your glasses prescription, but you’re entitled to it. Under the FTC’s Eyeglass Rule, your optometrist must provide your prescription at no extra charge — and the PD, while sometimes treated as a separate measurement, should be requested at the same time.

DIY PD measurement apps (GlassifyMe, PDMeasurement) use your phone camera with reasonable accuracy for simple prescriptions. Most online retailers include self-measurement instructions. For complex prescriptions, progressives, or bifocals, get a professional measurement — PD errors translate directly to eyestrain and headaches that have nothing to do with the prescription itself.

The Real Quality Differences

The honest picture on lens quality:

All major online retailers use FDA-regulated manufacturing processes. For simple single-vision lenses, the quality difference between Zenni and LensCrafters is minimal. The real gaps are:

  • Frame construction: Warby Parker and GlassesUSA’s mid-range use better materials than budget Zenni or EyeBuyDirect offerings. Budget frames flex more, wear faster.
  • Coating durability: Entry-level AR coatings scratch and craze faster than premium coatings. Worth upgrading if you keep glasses more than 18 months.
  • Progressive optics: Budget progressive designs have wider peripheral distortion zones. Freeform or HD progressive designs available at higher price points produce better optical quality — particularly important for first-time progressive wearers.
⚠ Watch Out For

Never order glasses from a prescription more than 12 months old. Your prescription may have drifted, and glasses made to an outdated Rx will cause eyestrain — sometimes severe enough to make the glasses unusable. Online retailers technically require a valid prescription but can’t always verify recency. Don’t self-certify an expired prescription; get a fresh exam first. It’s an inconvenience that protects your eyes and your money.

Bottom Line

For simple prescriptions, online ordering delivers real savings — especially for backup pairs and prescription sunglasses. Zenni and EyeBuyDirect are the budget leaders. Warby Parker and Clearly offer better quality and stronger return policies at moderate prices. GlassesUSA is worth checking specifically if your insurance has a usable out-of-network benefit. For progressive wearers or complex prescriptions, in-person fitting at Costco, a private optician, or even Walmart Vision tends to produce more reliable outcomes than online ordering alone.

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.