Progressive eyeglasses

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My insurance will pay $350 plus 20 percent off any amount over $350, but given the full cost, I will still have to pay about $500 out of pocket - depending on how expensive the frames are. Lenses alone are nearly $800 I was told!


Depends on where you go and what you need. With a -6 she needs reasonably high index lenses, so they won't be cheap.

My lenses are about that, and my fancy frames another $400.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I have a low correction and like progressives. My problem is getting halfway-decent lenses. My early pairs were from a no-name optical shop that is now out of business. They were perfect. (I'm sure they outsourced them to a third party but I don't know who.)

Now I try MyEyeDr and they're awful. They offer to regrind the lenses for the same price and they're better but still bad.

Do you have a good optical shop that is good at progressive lenses?


Georgetown Optician.

Very expensive but they do the work in house. I don't think their markeup is unusual, but they do sell expensive frames.
Anonymous
Progressives seemed like the ideal solution for me (although distance vision isn't as bad as yours and closeup is worse). But I never could get used to the blurring of peripheral vision no matter how much I tried to turn my head to look to the left or right. I ended up abandoning two pairs of expensive progressives and going back to prescription regular and sunglasses for distance and cheap readers to read. Sigh.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I got them and found they work best with a larger pair of glasses. You do get used to them. It must have taken me about 6 weeks but now they are the new normal and I have not fallen down the stairs.


I like mine now. I tried them in the past, and I simply wasn't able to adjust. Now, in my early 50s, I'm fine with them. I agree that they work best with larger frames.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have a low correction and like progressives. My problem is getting halfway-decent lenses. My early pairs were from a no-name optical shop that is now out of business. They were perfect. (I'm sure they outsourced them to a third party but I don't know who.)

Now I try MyEyeDr and they're awful. They offer to regrind the lenses for the same price and they're better but still bad.

Do you have a good optical shop that is good at progressive lenses?


Georgetown Optician.

Very expensive but they do the work in house. I don't think their markeup is unusual, but they do sell expensive frames.


Costco - Lenses + frames cost about half as much as what I've paid in "fancier" stores. I love mine.
Anonymous
I got progressives last year and absolutely LOVE them. I was a daily contact lens wearer for life, and I completely gave them up because my vision is so much better with the progressives. The adjustment took all of about a day. You're making too much out of this.
Anonymous
I, too, was worried about transitioning to progressives, but they were like magic and I wore them out of the store and drove home. I never got headaches or felt nauseous. The only time I feel I need to be careful is on stairs as my downward looking depth perception is a bit off. But I'm a fan!
Anonymous
Costco has the best price. I had to return my first progressive eyeglasses and they reimbursed me for it.
Anonymous
I am -6.5 and got my first pair of Progressives at Costco - they are fine and were not expensive. They definitely recommended a wider lense and am glad I followed their advice.
Anonymous
I use my progressive for everything but reading. I am far sighted and I would need different glasses for cooking/chopping veggies, eating, watching TV and driving/walking if I did not have progressives. I can read shout things with them, but I prefer reading glasses for newspapers, computer and books.

There is a learning curve and I think the horror stories you have heard are mainly during that time period. Your eyes and brain get used to them and learn how to make them work. I had never worn glasses before and it took a few months to get to used to the whole thing. Since you have been wearing glasses your whole life, your learning curve should be shorter.
Anonymous
I like my progressives for everything except driving at night. If I don’t have my glasses positioned exactly right so that I’m looking through the top of the lens, things are blurry. It bothers me more when I’m driving at night.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My insurance will pay $350 plus 20 percent off any amount over $350, but given the full cost, I will still have to pay about $500 out of pocket - depending on how expensive the frames are. Lenses alone are nearly $800 I was told!


Mine are close to that. -6, astigmatism, a few other things, and progressive. I get them done at a good shop that does the work in-house. If you can afford it, OP, spend like this PP and me.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have a low correction and like progressives. My problem is getting halfway-decent lenses. My early pairs were from a no-name optical shop that is now out of business. They were perfect. (I'm sure they outsourced them to a third party but I don't know who.)

Now I try MyEyeDr and they're awful. They offer to regrind the lenses for the same price and they're better but still bad.

Do you have a good optical shop that is good at progressive lenses?


Georgetown Optician.

Very expensive but they do the work in house. I don't think their markeup is unusual, but they do sell expensive frames.


Costco - Lenses + frames cost about half as much as what I've paid in "fancier" stores. I love mine.


It really depends on what your eyes need. Costco has a great reputation, but there are people who really need a bit more than they can provide. I find their frames rather ordinary, but YMMV.

OP, if you buy a pair and it takes more than a day to adjust, they weren't made right. You can get used to almost anything but you shouldn't have to "get used to it".


Anonymous
Being picky (vain), I bought a pair of frames elsewhere and then had Costco fill the progressive Rx. They charge a small fee for this, but I still saved money over purchasing at an optician's. I have found their work to be excellent.
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