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In 1971, roughly 1 in 4 Americans was nearsighted. Today it’s nearly 1 in 2. The National Eye Institute has tracked that shift for decades, and it’s still accelerating β€” especially in children. By 2050, researchers project half the world’s population will have myopia.

That trend has two layers. The obvious one: more people need glasses. The less-obvious one: myopia beyond –6.00 diopters isn’t just a prescription problem. It’s a structural change to the eye that elevates lifetime risk of retinal detachment, glaucoma, and central vision loss. The window to slow progression in children is narrow and closing fast.

Why the Eye Goes Blurry at Distance

Myopia is an anatomy problem, not an “eyesight weakness.” A myopic eye is either slightly too long front-to-back, or has a cornea that curves too steeply β€” sometimes both. The result: light focuses in front of the retina instead of directly on it. Close objects look sharp. Distant ones blur.

The Epidemic Has Two Drivers

Less time outdoors. This is the stronger factor. Research from China and Taiwan on dramatic myopia spikes in urban children pointed to outdoor time specifically β€” not exercise, but exposure to natural light. Outdoor light stimulates retinal dopamine release, which appears to slow the axial elongation (eye lengthening) that causes myopia. The AOA and NEI now cite outdoor time as the most evidence-backed modifiable factor in preventing myopia onset.

More near work. Reading, screens, and sustained close-focus tasks may accelerate progression in genetically predisposed children. The causal relationship isn’t fully proven, but the correlation holds across populations.

Genetics. One myopic parent roughly doubles a child’s risk; two myopic parents roughly quadruples it. Genetics sets the floor β€” but it doesn’t explain why rates have doubled in 50 years. Our genes haven’t changed. Our environments have.

How Severe Is Your Myopia? Understanding the Scale

Prescriptions are written in diopters (D), shown as negative SPH values. The further from zero, the higher the risk β€” and the fewer correction options are available.

LevelSPH RangePractical DescriptionKey Risks
Mild–0.25 to –3.00Blurry beyond a few feetMinimal; glasses or contacts manage well
Moderate–3.00 to –6.00Blurry beyond arm’s lengthManageable; LASIK typically available
High–6.00 to –10.00Very limited clear distanceElevated retinal detachment, glaucoma risk
Very High / ExtremeBeyond –10.00Functional blur even at moderate distancesSignificant risk of myopic maculopathy, retinal detachment

High myopia is more than a prescription problem. The physical elongation of the eye thins and stretches the retina, raising lifetime risk of:

  • Retinal detachment β€” 6–10Γ— higher than in non-myopic eyes
  • Glaucoma β€” 2–3Γ— higher risk
  • Myopic maculopathy β€” mechanical damage to the central retina
  • Early cataracts β€” occurring at younger ages than average

Keeping a child’s prescription in the mild-to-moderate range isn’t just cosmetic. It’s a health intervention.

Every Correction Option for Adults

If your myopia is stable, you have five main approaches:

1. Eyeglasses

The lowest barrier to entry. Single-vision lenses for mild-to-moderate myopia are straightforward and cheap to produce.

  • Budget frames + lenses (online retailers): $10–$80
  • Mid-range (chain optical): $100–$300 with frame
  • Premium (designer frames + high-index lenses): $300–$600+
  • High-index lenses (essential for high prescriptions to avoid thick lenses): adds $50–$150

2. Contact Lenses

Wider field of view than glasses; no fogging. Annual costs vary by type:

  • Daily disposables: $400–$700/year
  • Biweekly/monthly disposables: $200–$500/year
  • Toric contacts for astigmatism: add $100–$300/year
  • Annual contact lens exam: $100–$200 (separate from your glasses exam)

3. LASIK

Permanently reshapes the cornea. Best results for mild-to-moderate myopia (–1.00 to roughly –8.00, depending on corneal thickness). According to the AAO, over 95% of suitable candidates achieve 20/40 or better uncorrected; 90%+ reach 20/20.

  • Total cost: $4,000–$6,000 (both eyes)
  • Insurance: rarely covered
  • Candidacy: requires adequate corneal thickness, stable prescription, dry eye screening

4. ICL (Implantable Collamer Lens)

A soft lens placed inside the eye in front of the natural lens β€” not a lens replacement. Works for prescriptions too strong for LASIK or patients with thin corneas. Reversible.

  • Cost: $3,000–$5,000 per eye ($6,000–$10,000 total)
  • FDA-approved range: up to –20.00 diopters
  • Best for: high myopia, thin corneas, chronic dry eye

5. Orthokeratology (Ortho-K)

Rigid gas-permeable lenses worn overnight that temporarily reshape the cornea. You wake up with clear vision; no daytime lenses needed. The effect reverses without ongoing wear.

  • Cost: $1,000–$2,000/year
  • Most common use: myopia control in children

Myopia Control for Kids: A Different Conversation

If your child is being diagnosed with myopia, correction is only half the conversation. The clinical priority is slowing progression β€” keeping their prescription from advancing into the high range where disease risk rises sharply.

The AAO recognizes several interventions with solid evidence:

Low-dose atropine drops (0.01%–0.05%): Applied nightly, these slow eye elongation through a mechanism still being studied. They’re the most extensively researched myopia control intervention available. Cost: $20–$100/month depending on compounded vs. commercial formulations.

MiSight daily contact lenses: FDA-approved specifically for myopia control. Slows progression by roughly 59% in clinical trials. Cost: $900–$1,500/year.

Ortho-K: Strong evidence for slowing axial elongation. Cost: $1,000–$2,000/year including follow-up care.

Outdoor time: The most accessible intervention. Research consistently links 90+ minutes of outdoor time daily with significantly reduced myopia onset and slower progression. This costs nothing.

Correction/Control MethodAnnual Cost10-Year Total (Est.)Notes
Basic eyeglasses$150–$300/yr$1,500–$3,000Replace every 1–2 years
Daily contact lenses$500–$700/yr$5,000–$7,000Includes exam costs
Monthly contacts$250–$450/yr$2,500–$4,500Includes exam costs
LASIK (one-time)$4,000–$6,000 total$4,000–$6,000Usually covered once
ICL (one-time)$6,000–$10,000 total$6,000–$10,000Higher Rx option
Atropine drops (child)$240–$1,200/yr$1,200–$6,0005-year treatment typical
MiSight lenses (child)$900–$1,500/yr$4,500–$7,5005-year treatment typical
Ortho-K (child/adult)$1,000–$2,000/yr$5,000–$10,000Annual lenses needed
The Window for Myopia Control Is Short

Myopia control works during active eye growth β€” roughly ages 6 to 16. After the eye stabilizes, usually in the mid-to-late teens, the opportunity for intervention is gone. But the structural changes from high myopia are already set. If your child is developing myopia, the time to talk to an OD about control options is now β€” not after the prescription crosses –4.00 or –6.00.

⚠ Watch Out For

High myopia (beyond –6.00) significantly raises retinal detachment risk. Know the warning signs: a sudden surge in floaters, flashes of light, or a curtain-like shadow creeping across your peripheral vision. These are same-day medical emergencies β€” not something to monitor over the weekend. Retinal detachments caught quickly can often be repaired with minimal permanent vision loss. Delayed treatment can mean permanent blindness.

For adults with mild-to-moderate, stable myopia, glasses or contacts are a perfectly reasonable lifelong solution. But if you’re managing a child’s developing myopia, or living with high myopia yourself, the conversation goes well beyond picking frames.

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.