Much of the hoopla surrounding buying glasses online ignores two important facts: First, the really cheap glasses (think $100 or less including lenses) you find online are exclusively house-brand, generic-type frames. This isn’t a bad thing per se, particularly given that the discount retailers selling these glasses offer surprising quality and low, low prices. In fact, if you need new specs and don’t have much cash or need a second, third, or fourth pair, these discounters are completely awesome.

Secondly, let’s face it — glasses shopping for most people involves boots on the ground, going to a mall or boutique, and finding the perfect pair. The glasses you find there will almost invariably be an off-the-shelf product from one of the dozens of common eyewear designers. At the lower end of the price range you’ll find brands like Elements and Esprit; at the higher end you’ll find names like Prada and Versace. If you look, all the frames will have a  maker and model number printed on a little wrap-around sticker or other tag. You’ll find the same makers and often the same models at Pearle Vision, Lens Crafters, or any of a number of similar stores. You’ll also find all these stores charging almost exactly the MSRP for the frame, and strikingly similar prices for lenses.

My goal here is to compare the price of the exact same pair of prescription eyeglasses at a typical mall glasses store and at an online designer shop selling all of the major brands. Specifically, my price comparison is based on available pricing at Pearle Vision and available pricing at the online store, Frames Direct. To obtain this information, I first visited a retailer at the mall, found a style I liked, and then requested pricing info from the retailer. Next, I jumped online and quoted the same pair with the same specs from one of the more common online shops. I believe this order of comparison (retailer first, online second) was important. Starting with the online shop could have introduced bias — perhaps the website would lead me to their most discounted frame, for example, thereby exaggerating price differences if I compared the website’s most promoted and discounted frame with the same frame, unpromoted and undiscounted at the store in the mall.

Okay, so let’s get right to the numbers, which I think speak for themselves.

RetailOnline
Frame - Versace VE1190$225$182.75
Lens - Standard polycarbonate$215$89
Coatings: UV and anti-scratch$0$0
Coating: Anti-glare$100$44.95
Tax (7%) + delivery / shipping$37.80$0
Discounts available at writing$0$53.18
Total$577.80$263.12

Now, a couple of items worth mentioning: I obtained the prices from the retailer by requesting a custom quote from the Pearle Vision at the mall. These prices are set, to some degree, by the individual franchise.  Second, I assumed a local tax rate of 7%. Finally, at the time of writing, Frames Direct offered 40% off the lenses only if paired with certain frames, of which Versace happened to be one. This discount may or may not be available when you order. This particular online shop advertises their coupon codes very prominently on their front page, so it is super easy to see what coupons are available.

 

I ran across this today:

My employer has a rather generous vision plan that covers $155 towards new eyeglass frames and 100% of the lenses through insurance provider VSP. With the new insurance, I was thinking I might actually be able to get away with simply paying the co-pay of $25. I was so excited! I may actually get to try on some glasses, in person, and see what they’d look like on my face. Wow, what a privilege!

My excitement quickly faded before my appointment as I started trying on glasses and looking at the little price tags on each of them. $300, $350, $400… things were not looking good. Sure, there were a few cheap, outdated frames that I could get for around $200, but the quality of these frames were not even close to being as good as the quality of the frameless memory titanium, anti-reflective coated glasses that I had purchased online about 3 years earlier for under $40. Equivalent glasses were actually 10 times more at the local optometrist!

Read more at 20somethingfinance…

I have this exact same setup with my employer: a decent vision plan, but the outrageous prices at the optometrist quickly wiped away every dollar the insurance would cover and required several hundred out of my own pocket. Six, seven, even ten times more compared to the nice frames you can get online? Sorry, I don’t think so.

So let your optometrist measure your vision, but don’t let them sell you a pair of glasses.

 

$200 later and not even any new frames to show for it, this blogger was fed up with traditional eyewear stores. Thanks to the internet and some online info, capitalism wins out and the guy gets a great pair of glasses for $25.

Check out his post. It’s complete with great visuals of the goggles4u.com product. (use coupon “STTJ2W” for 5% off) So check it out. See what you’ll get. Order some glasses online and think, “$350 glasses: no more!”

Mr. Golfer even mentions ditching his vision insurance thanks to newfound cheap glasses. Not such a bad idea. At my work, we’re set up with health savings accounts. A great tool for buying glasses online with employer-contributed or at least pre-tax money.

 

From “Think Cheaply,” a consumer blog:

Stop spending $300 for eyeglasses, order online.


I was sitting with a friend at lunch the other day, he was talking about his new eyeglasses, and how they were way overpriced. He had paid $300 for eyeglasses at the local shopping mall, and felt like he had been ripped off.

Now, I thought I was a step above him. I would buy my eyeglasses at an discount optical store called America’s Best Contacts and Eyeglasses. When I was a kid, this was the place that my parents had dragged me to, and had me pick eyeglasses off the 49 dollar rack or whatever.

Continue reading at Think Cheaply…

His glasses look a whole lot like mine. No matter which site you choose for your eyewear, you’ll get a case and cleaning cloth similar to that shown above.

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