Maria had been wearing soft contacts since she was 16. At 40, her optometrist finally said the words she’d been dreading: her corneas had progressed too far. Standard soft lenses weren’t just giving her blurry vision — they were no longer a safe option. She was referred to a specialty contact lens clinic across town, handed a brochure about scleral lenses, and quoted $2,800 for the fitting and first pair.
She’d never heard of them. Most people haven’t — until they need them.
What Scleral Lenses Actually Are
Scleral lenses are large-diameter, rigid gas-permeable contact lenses. Where a standard GP lens is 9–10mm and rests on the cornea, a scleral lens is 14–24mm in diameter and vaults completely over the cornea, resting entirely on the sclera — the white part of the eye.
That distinction matters for two reasons. First, the lens never touches an irregular, cone-shaped, or scarred cornea — so it doesn’t cause the discomfort that makes conventional lenses unwearable. Second, the space between the back of the lens and the cornea fills with preservative-free saline solution, creating a liquid lens that corrects the cornea’s optical irregularities and keeps the eye continuously bathed in moisture.
The result: crisp vision for eyes that can’t get it any other way, and all-day comfort for eyes too dry to tolerate anything else.
Who Needs Scleral Lenses
These aren’t for mild prescriptions. Specialty fitters prescribe sclerals for:
- Keratoconus — the most common indication; the cornea progressively thins and bulges into a cone shape
- Post-LASIK ectasia — corneal thinning that develops after laser vision correction in some patients
- Pellucid marginal degeneration — thinning at the lower corneal periphery
- Corneal transplant — irregular surface after penetrating keratoplasty or DALK
- Severe dry eye disease — including Sjögren’s syndrome and graft-vs-host disease
- Stevens-Johnson syndrome — corneal scarring from severe mucocutaneous reactions
- Corneal scarring from infection or injury
Research published in Contact Lens and Anterior Eye (the CLAO journal) has documented scleral lens outcomes for keratoconus patients, showing mean high-contrast visual acuity of 20/25 or better in patients whose best-corrected spectacle acuity was 20/60. For patients who’ve struggled for years, that improvement is life-changing. The AAO’s clinical guidance recognizes scleral lenses as the standard of care for moderate-to-advanced keratoconus when corneal cross-linking has stabilized the disease but vision remains compromised.
The Fitting Process — Why It Takes Multiple Visits
Scleral lens fitting isn’t a single appointment. You’re looking at a structured multi-visit process:
Step 1: Corneal topography and mapping ($100–$200) Detailed computerized mapping of your cornea’s surface — sometimes combined with OCT imaging for advanced cases. This creates the blueprint for your lens parameters.
Step 2: Diagnostic fitting session ($200–$400) Your fitter selects a trial lens from a fitting set, fills it with saline, and evaluates fit under the slit lamp. The vault over the cornea, the landing on the sclera, and the edge lift all need assessment. Most patients need 2–4 trial sets before parameters are finalized.
Step 3: Lens fabrication (2–3 weeks) Custom sclerals are manufactured to order by specialized labs — Paragon, X-Cel, TruForm, or ABB Optical — based on your finalized parameters. There’s no off-the-shelf option.
Step 4: Dispense and training When lenses arrive, you return for insertion/removal training and initial wear-time evaluation. Follow-up visits check fit at 1 week, 1 month, and annually thereafter.
| Cost Component | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Corneal topography / mapping | $100–$200 |
| Fitting fee (all fitting visits) | $300–$600 |
| Lens fabrication (per pair) | $500–$800 |
| First-year follow-up visits | $150–$300 |
| Total first year (pair + all visits) | $1,500–$4,000 |
| Replacement lenses (subsequent years) | $500–$900/pair |
| Preservative-free saline (ongoing supply) | $30–$60/month |
Mini-Sclerals vs. Full Sclerals
The distinction comes down to diameter:
- Mini-sclerals (15–18mm): Land near the limbus and just inside the sclera. Slightly easier to fit and a good match for mild-to-moderate irregularity.
- Full sclerals (18–24mm): Land entirely on the sclera. Better for severe cases, very dry eyes, or eyes with significant limbal pathology.
Your fitter chooses the appropriate size based on your anatomy and diagnosis — it’s not a patient preference decision.
Insurance Coverage: Worth Pursuing
The AAO notes that scleral lenses prescribed for keratoconus or corneal ectasia may qualify as prosthetic devices under medical insurance — separate from vision plan contact lens benefits. Here’s how to approach coverage:
- Get a proper ICD-10 diagnosis code documented (H18.600 for keratoconus)
- Ask your fitter for a letter of medical necessity stating that conventional correction fails to provide adequate visual acuity
- Submit to medical insurance — not vision insurance — with appropriate fitting and fabrication procedure codes
- Appeal if denied; keratoconus coverage has strong clinical precedent
Medicare Part B covers scleral lenses as prosthetic devices when keratoconus or another qualifying corneal condition is the primary diagnosis. Commercial plans vary widely — call your insurer before the first fitting appointment.
The Gas Permeable Lens Institute (GPLI) maintains a free fitter locator at gpli.info. Search for “scleral lens” to find certified fitters in your area. Academic medical centers and university optometry schools often have specialty contact lens clinics that fit complex cases — sometimes at lower cost than private practices.
Lens Lifespan: The Long-Term Economics
Soft contacts need replacement every 1–4 weeks. Sclerals, cared for properly, last 2–3 years per pair — sometimes longer. That changes the math:
- Year 1 (fitting + first pair): $1,500–$4,000
- Years 2–3 (replacement pair only): $500–$900
- Annual ongoing saline cost: $360–$720
Over three years, the total cost competes favorably with premium daily disposable soft lenses. For someone with keratoconus who’s tried five brands of soft lenses and gotten poor results with all of them, sclerals often end up being both the most effective and — paradoxically — the most cost-effective long-term solution.
Don’t attempt to buy sclerals without a proper fitting from a qualified specialist. Scleral lens parameters are highly individualized — vault depth, total diameter, haptic landing zone, and power all must match your specific anatomy. An ill-fitting scleral lens can trap debris under the lens, deprive the cornea of oxygen, or cause limbal stem cell damage with extended wear. These are not a lens you can approximate online.
Questions to Ask Before You Commit
Before paying fitting fees, get clear answers on:
- How many scleral fits do you complete per month? (Look for experienced fitters doing 10+ per month)
- What lens lab do you use? (Established labs produce more consistent results)
- Is my fitting fee refundable if we can’t achieve a successful fit? (Policies vary significantly)
- Will you submit insurance claims for me? (Many specialty fitters handle the paperwork)
- Is first-year follow-up care included in the fitting fee?
The right fitter makes an enormous difference. Scleral fitting is a skill-intensive specialty — experience matters more than proximity.
Frequently Asked Questions
Most patients find them significantly more comfortable than standard GP lenses — and often more comfortable than soft lenses they've tried previously. The large diameter means the lens edge rests on the sclera rather than on the sensitive cornea. The fluid reservoir between the lens and cornea keeps the eye cushioned and lubricated throughout the day. There's an adjustment period of 1–2 weeks, but most keratoconus patients report sclerals as the most comfortable lens they've ever worn.
Sometimes — and it's worth pursuing. When your diagnosis is keratoconus, post-LASIK ectasia, corneal scarring, or another medical condition, sclerals may qualify as prosthetic devices under medical insurance rather than routine contact lenses under vision insurance. Medicare Part B sometimes covers them when properly documented. You'll need an ICD-10 diagnosis code, a letter of medical necessity, and documentation that glasses and soft contacts failed. Vision-only plans like VSP and EyeMed rarely cover them.
Plan for 2–4 weeks of daily practice before insertion and removal feels natural. Sclerals are filled with preservative-free saline before inserting, which requires a slightly different technique than soft contacts. Most specialty lens clinics include a dedicated training session in the fitting fee. A DMV plunger tool makes removal much easier and is provided by most fitters. First-week fumbling is completely normal.