Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VSP is basically a waste. You are required to go to certain providers who give you a "free" exam, but then you pay exorbitant prices for glasses and contacts. Just go to Costco for your eye exam, then buy your contacts and glasses online. Even if you need to try on glasses before you buy, many online sites now allow that or you could go to a Warby Parker store. You'll still come out ahead versus paying for the VSP plan then going to a VSP provider for your contacts and glasses.
I have VSP and while I have to use the VSP provider for an eye exam, I don't have to use them for contact lens benefit. I buy my glasses online, which is pretty cheap (less than Warby Parker). It's not mandatory to buy glasses and contact lenses from the VSP provider.
If you have a VSP provider that willingly hands over the prescription after the eye exam, please share the name. Sure, they're legally required to do it but that doesn't mean they actually will.
Anonymous wrote:I've never had dental or vision insurance in my life. Just pay out of pocket.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VSP is basically a waste. You are required to go to certain providers who give you a "free" exam, but then you pay exorbitant prices for glasses and contacts. Just go to Costco for your eye exam, then buy your contacts and glasses online. Even if you need to try on glasses before you buy, many online sites now allow that or you could go to a Warby Parker store. You'll still come out ahead versus paying for the VSP plan then going to a VSP provider for your contacts and glasses.
I have VSP and while I have to use the VSP provider for an eye exam, I don't have to use them for contact lens benefit. I buy my glasses online, which is pretty cheap (less than Warby Parker). It's not mandatory to buy glasses and contact lenses from the VSP provider.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:VSP is basically a waste. You are required to go to certain providers who give you a "free" exam, but then you pay exorbitant prices for glasses and contacts. Just go to Costco for your eye exam, then buy your contacts and glasses online. Even if you need to try on glasses before you buy, many online sites now allow that or you could go to a Warby Parker store. You'll still come out ahead versus paying for the VSP plan then going to a VSP provider for your contacts and glasses.
Depends on the plan. It fully covers our eye doctor of choice. And, we get a huge discount on expensive glasses.
Anonymous wrote:I've never had dental or vision insurance in my life. Just pay out of pocket.
Anonymous wrote:VSP is basically a waste. You are required to go to certain providers who give you a "free" exam, but then you pay exorbitant prices for glasses and contacts. Just go to Costco for your eye exam, then buy your contacts and glasses online. Even if you need to try on glasses before you buy, many online sites now allow that or you could go to a Warby Parker store. You'll still come out ahead versus paying for the VSP plan then going to a VSP provider for your contacts and glasses.
Anonymous wrote:VSP is basically a waste. You are required to go to certain providers who give you a "free" exam, but then you pay exorbitant prices for glasses and contacts. Just go to Costco for your eye exam, then buy your contacts and glasses online. Even if you need to try on glasses before you buy, many online sites now allow that or you could go to a Warby Parker store. You'll still come out ahead versus paying for the VSP plan then going to a VSP provider for your contacts and glasses.
Anonymous wrote:We’ve had FEDVIP vision and dental coverage, in addition to BCBS FEP for 20+ years. My oldest child is a college senior and on the older side for her grade (fall birthday). In the late summer, about two months before her birthday, we got two letters in the mail— identical except one was for FEDVIP dental (we have MetLife) and the other for vision (we have VSP). They informed us that as of her 22nd birthday, she would no longer be covered by either of these plans as our dependent. Our regular medical insurance covers her till she’s 26 but the vision and dental plans stop at 22. So now she doesn’t have that coverage until she finds employment after graduation. (Working on it, but in her field applications are just opening.) Since she was away at school she wasn’t able to see our regular dentist and eye doctor before the coverage ended (she also wears both contacts and glasses). Fortunately she was able to use our BCBS medical insurance for a dental checkup and cleaning for just a $35 copay, but now we are waiting and crossing fingers that her teeth and eyes stay healthy till she’s got a job.
Just a word of warning because this caught us completely by surprise and I’m sure there are other Feds in the same position.