Eighty-seven million Americans have VSP — and most of them enrolled because it was on the benefits checklist at work, not because they researched it. That’s fine. VSP is generally a solid plan. But “the default choice” and “the right choice for your situation” aren’t always the same thing. Here’s an honest look at what you actually get.
What VSP Plans Cost
VSP individual plans sold directly to consumers (not through an employer) typically run $17–$23/month, depending on plan tier and state. That’s $204–$276 annually.
If you’re getting VSP through an employer, you’re likely paying $3–$10/month because your company subsidizes the bulk of the premium — an entirely different value proposition from buying it yourself.
| VSP Plan | Monthly Premium | Annual Exam Copay | Frame Allowance | Contact Allowance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VSP Signature (basic) | $17/mo | $15 | $150 | $150 |
| VSP Choice (mid-tier) | $20/mo | $10 | $180 | $160 |
| VSP Premium | $23/mo | $10 | $200 | $175 |
The exam copays are reasonable. A comprehensive eye exam through VSP typically costs $10–$15 after the plan pays its share — versus $100–$150 paying cash at a private optometrist. VSP members save roughly $85–$140 on every exam they use in-network.
What VSP Actually Covers (And What It Doesn’t)
Covered well:
- Comprehensive annual eye exam (every 12 months)
- Single-vision, lined bifocal, and trifocal lenses (with lens copays of $25–$50 depending on type)
- Frames at a retail allowance of $150–$200 toward any in-network frame
- Contact lenses either as a fitting allowance or in place of glasses
What costs extra or isn’t covered:
- Anti-reflective coating (usually $10–$35 extra even in-network)
- Progressive lenses: covered at a set amount, but premium progressives can add $100–$200
- Photochromic lenses: partial coverage at best
- LASIK: not covered under standard VSP, though VSP has a laser discount program (15–35% off at partner centers)
- Medical eye care (infections, disease management): falls under your medical insurance, not VSP
The main difference is network access. With VSP Signature, you must use VSP Premier or Signature network providers or pay out-of-network rates. VSP Choice opens up a broader provider network, including many retail locations. If you have a specific private-practice OD you want to keep seeing, verify they’re in your specific tier before enrolling — not all VSP network providers participate in all VSP plan tiers.
The Network: VSP’s Biggest Strength (and Limitation)
VSP’s 39,000+ provider network is dominated by private-practice optometrists. That’s genuinely excellent if you value seeing an independent OD rather than a retail chain employee. VSP also has agreements with some Walmart Vision Centers, Costco, and Sam’s Club locations.
Where VSP falls short compared to EyeMed: fewer LensCrafters and retail chain locations in network. If you want the convenience of a mall optical shop, EyeMed’s retail-heavy network is a better fit.
Out-of-network coverage exists on most VSP plans but at significantly reduced rates — typically $45 toward an exam and $70 toward frames. That’s modest reimbursement; don’t build your care plan around it.
What Patients Often Misunderstand About VSP
The frame allowance isn’t a rebate. You don’t get a check for $175. It’s a discount applied at the time of purchase at in-network providers. If frames cost $250 and your allowance is $175, you pay $75 — but only at in-network locations.
Your benefit resets on the anniversary date, not January 1. If you enrolled in July, your benefit refreshes each July. This catches people off guard when they try to use their glasses benefit in January and find out they already used it in August.
Contact lens fitting is a separate charge. The contact lens allowance covers the lenses themselves. The contact lens fitting exam is billed separately — expect a $25–$75 copay for a basic fitting, more for specialty lenses.
VSP members sometimes report being upsold at in-network practices on lens packages and coatings not covered by the plan. Before agreeing to any add-ons, politely ask your provider to separate out what VSP covers versus what you’re paying out-of-pocket. Knowing that breakdown before you say yes is worth the 60 seconds it takes to ask.
Bottom Line
VSP is a solid choice if you see an independent optometrist, use your glasses benefit every year, and buy modestly priced frames. The exam coverage alone nearly pays for an employer-subsidized plan. For self-purchased plans at $20+/month, you need to actually use the glasses or contacts benefit to break even. The network is excellent for private-practice patients but less convenient if you prefer shopping at retail chains. For the full cost comparison on whether vision insurance pays off at all, see is vision insurance worth it.