Cost Disclaimer: Vision care costs vary significantly by provider, location, and insurance coverage. Prices shown are national averages for 2024–2025. Always get quotes from multiple providers and verify coverage with your insurer before scheduling treatment. This site does not provide medical advice.

School vision screenings catch about half of the kids who need glasses. That’s the number — and it comes from NEI research showing that standard school screenings, which typically test only distance visual acuity, miss nearsightedness that develops at near range, tracking problems, focusing disorders, and the full picture of how a child’s eyes work together. Your child can pass a school vision screening and still have a vision problem that’s affecting their reading.

A comprehensive eye exam is different. Here’s what it costs and when it matters most.

What a Pediatric Eye Exam Costs in 2026

Costs vary by provider type, location, and whether you have vision insurance. Here’s the range you should expect:

Provider / SettingCost Without InsuranceNotes
Optometrist (private practice)$80–$150Most common for routine pediatric exams
Ophthalmologist (MD)$120–$250Warranted for medical eye conditions
Retail optical (Costco, Walmart Vision)$60–$100Lower cost, often good for straightforward cases
Pediatric ophthalmologist (specialist)$150–$350Amblyopia, strabismus, complex cases
VSP/EyeMed covered exam$0–$10 copayCovered under most child vision plans
Medicaid/CHIP$0Eye exams covered for eligible children
InfantSEE program (0–12 months)FreeOne free exam for infants under 1 year

If your family has vision insurance and you’re in-network, the exam itself is usually covered with a small copay or fully included. The out-of-pocket cost hits parents who don’t have vision benefits or whose employer plan doesn’t cover dependents adequately.

School Screening vs. Comprehensive Exam: What’s the Difference?

A school screening takes about 2 minutes and checks whether a child can read a standard eye chart at 20 feet. That’s it. A comprehensive pediatric eye exam takes 30–60 minutes and tests:

  • Visual acuity at distance AND near
  • Binocular vision (how both eyes work together)
  • Eye tracking and convergence (critical for reading)
  • Focusing ability (accommodation) — a 10-year-old’s ability to shift focus from board to desk matters enormously
  • Eye alignment (ruling out strabismus)
  • Internal and external eye health
  • Color vision (often done once in childhood)

The AOA recommends comprehensive eye exams at 6 months, age 3, before first grade, and then annually through age 18. That schedule exists because vision problems develop and change rapidly during school years — a prescription that was fine at age 8 may be meaningfully off by age 10.

Signs Your Child Needs an Exam — Not Just a Screening

Don’t wait for a failed school screening. These behavioral signs warrant a prompt eye exam regardless of screening results:

  • Squinting or tilting head to see the board or TV
  • Losing their place while reading, skipping lines, or using a finger to track
  • Short attention span for reading but not for other activities
  • Sitting very close to screens or the TV
  • Eye rubbing or headaches after close work
  • One eye turning in or out — especially intermittently
  • Avoiding reading or complaining books are “boring” when they used to enjoy it

Reading-related vision problems are frequently mistaken for ADHD or learning disabilities. An undetected convergence insufficiency, for example, makes sustained reading exhausting — and looks a lot like attention problems from the outside.

Where to Save on Pediatric Eye Exams

Vision insurance first: If your employer offers vision benefits, check whether dependent children are covered. VSP, EyeMed, and Cigna Vision all offer pediatric vision coverage under qualifying plans, and the Affordable Care Act requires pediatric vision coverage in most ACA marketplace plans.

Medicaid/CHIP: Children enrolled in Medicaid or CHIP are entitled to comprehensive eye exams at no cost. Coverage includes glasses if needed. If your household qualifies, this is a completely free pathway.

InfantSEE: For babies under 12 months, the InfantSEE program (administered through the AOA) offers one free comprehensive eye exam from a participating optometrist. You don’t need insurance to access it.

Retail optical chains: Costco Vision Center, Walmart Vision Center, and Target Optical offer exams at lower cost than most private practices — typically $60–$90. The quality of the exam depends on the individual OD on staff, not the retailer. Ask whether the optometrist is a VSP provider if you have that insurance.

The Cost of Glasses After the Exam

The exam fee is separate from the glasses cost. If your child needs glasses, budget an additional:

  • Basic single-vision lenses in polycarbonate frames: $100–$300
  • Through insurance: often $50–$150 after benefits

Kids’ glasses are a recurring expense — frames get broken, prescriptions change, and kids grow. Spring hinges on frames ($10–$20 extra) reduce breakage significantly. Scratch-resistant coating is worth the upgrade for kids.

⚠ Watch Out For

Don’t rely on your child reporting vision problems. Children don’t know what “normal” vision looks like — if they’ve always seen blurry, they assume everyone does. The AOA’s recommendation for annual exams through age 18 isn’t overcautious; it reflects how quickly vision changes during development. A child who’s been squinting for six months has spent that time learning with suboptimal visual information. Annual exams catch problems before they compound.

Bottom Line

Back-to-school eye exams cost $60–$150 without insurance — and often $0 for children on Medicaid, CHIP, or with ACA-compliant family vision plans. The school screening your child just passed is not a substitute. A comprehensive exam checks the full picture of how your child’s visual system is developing — and that picture matters significantly for reading, learning, and classroom performance.

VisionCostGuide Editorial Team

Vision Cost Writer

Our writers collaborate with licensed optometrists and ophthalmologists to ensure all cost and health-related content is accurate, current, and useful for American eye care patients.