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Vision insurance vs. medical insurance: which one pays for what.

A straightforward primer for our patients. Two different kinds of plans, two different jobs, and one source of bill-day confusion. Here is the clean version.

Dr. Thomas Pinkston, O.D. Dr. Thomas Pinkston, O.D.
· May 2, 2026 · 5 min read
Eyewear display in an optical boutique with curated frames

This is the article we wish every new patient read before their first visit. It is the most common source of confusion at our front desk, and almost all of it boils down to two different kinds of insurance doing two different jobs.

The very short version: vision insurance pays for routine, well-eye care and eyewear. Medical insurance pays for diagnosing and treating eye problems. Some patients have both. Most patients only think about one. And on a real visit, what starts as one can quietly become the other.

What "vision insurance" actually is

Vision plans — VSP, EyeMed, Spectera, Community Eye Care, Davis Vision — are not really insurance in the traditional sense. They are benefits plans. You pay a small monthly premium (often through an employer) and in exchange get a defined annual benefit: one routine exam, plus an allowance toward frames or contact lenses, plus a discount on lenses.

Typical vision benefit looks like this:

  • One comprehensive routine exam per twelve months, with a low copay (often $0–$25).
  • A frame allowance (often around $130–$200) once every twelve to twenty-four months.
  • A lens allowance with discounted upgrades (anti-reflective, Transitions, polycarbonate).
  • A contact lens allowance as an alternative to glasses, not in addition.

The key word in everything above is routine. Vision plans pay for healthy-eye exams. They are designed around the assumption that you walked in seeing fine and walked out with an updated glasses prescription.

Eyewear and notepad arranged on a desk with reading materials
Vision plans cover the routine: exam, frames, lenses. Medical plans cover the rest.

What medical insurance actually is

Medical insurance — Medicare, Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, Cigna, Humana, United, Tricare — is real insurance. You meet a deductible, pay coinsurance, and the plan pays for the diagnosis and treatment of medical conditions. For eye care, that includes:

  • Glaucoma exams and follow-ups
  • Cataract evaluations and pre- or post-operative care
  • Macular degeneration monitoring
  • Diabetic eye exams (often covered annually with no deductible)
  • Dry eye evaluation and treatment
  • Foreign body removal, eye infections, pink eye
  • Flashes, floaters, sudden vision changes — anything urgent
  • Optical coherence tomography (OCT), visual field testing, retinal imaging when ordered for a diagnosis

Medical insurance does not cover routine glasses prescriptions, frames, or non-medically-necessary contact lenses. The line is whether the visit is about checking a healthy eye or evaluating something that has changed.

How a routine visit can become a medical visit

This is where most billing surprises happen. A patient comes in scheduled for a routine annual exam under their vision plan. During the exam we find:

  • Elevated eye pressure that needs follow-up
  • Early diabetic changes that need imaging and a report to the PCP
  • A floater that turns out to be a small retinal tear
  • Significantly dry corneal surface that warrants treatment
  • Drusen consistent with early macular degeneration

In any of those cases, the appointment shifts from "routine eye exam" to "evaluation of a medical condition." Honest billing requires us to bill the medical plan for the medical portion, not the vision plan. We are not adding a charge to be sneaky — we are following the rules that say medical findings get medical codes. The result for you is usually a deductible or coinsurance you weren't expecting if you only thought about your vision plan that day.

What this looks like at HFEC

We file claims with all of these plans every day: VSP, EyeMed, BCBS, Anthem, Medicare, Blue Medicare, Humana, Cigna, United Healthcare, Spectera, Community Eye Care, Tricare, CHAMPVA, AARP, UMR, Healthgram, HealthSCOPE. Our office manager, Miranda, has spent years learning which plans cover what, and we will tell you what we see before we generate a bill — not after.

If you are scheduling and you are not sure whether you have one plan or two, or what is going to be covered, the kindest thing you can do for yourself is call us before your visit. Ask Miranda or the front desk: "Here is what I have. Here is what I am coming in for. What should I expect?" Five minutes of conversation prevents 90% of the bill-day surprises.

Person reviewing paperwork and a calculator at a desk
Five minutes on the phone with our office almost always prevents the bill-day surprise.

The short cheat sheet

  • Coming in for a routine exam and new glasses? Bring your vision plan info (VSP, EyeMed, etc.). If you have it.
  • Coming in for a known eye problem — glaucoma follow-up, diabetic exam, sudden floaters, pink eye, dry eye? Bring your medical insurance card. The vision plan does not apply.
  • Coming in and not sure? Bring both. We will sort it out.
  • You have Medicare and a vision plan? That is common. Routine = vision. Medical = Medicare.
  • You have neither? We have transparent self-pay pricing and CareCredit options. Call us; nothing here is a surprise.

Booking — and asking questions

If you have ever left an eye exam confused about a bill, we are sorry; that is on the industry as much as on any single office. We try to do better here. Schedule online when you are ready, or call us at (828) 456-8361 with your insurance question first. Miranda is good. She has been doing this for years.

Most of our patients are neighbors. We will tell you what we see, what it costs, and what you owe — in plain English, like we tell each other.

Dr. Thomas Pinkston, O.D., co-owner of Haywood Family Eye Care

About the author

Dr. Thomas Pinkston, O.D.

Dr. Pinkston is a co-owner of Haywood Family Eye Care. He completed his O.D. at the UAB School of Optometry and a residency in ocular disease and refractive surgery in Atlanta before relocating his family to the Blue Ridge in 2016. He likes saying things clearly the first time.

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