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Medicare Eye Exam Coverage in 2026: Part B vs Medicare Advantage

The single most important Medicare-and-vision fact: Original Medicare does not cover routine eye exams for glasses. Part B does cover medical eye exams (glaucoma, AMD, diabetic retinopathy, cataract). Medicare Advantage plans typically add routine vision benefits.

Original Medicare vs Medicare Advantage: What is Covered

ServiceOriginal Medicare (Part A + B)Medicare Advantage (Part C)
Annual routine eye exam for glassesNOT coveredUsually covered ($0-$40 copay)
Glaucoma screening (high-risk patients)Covered: 20% after deductibleCovered (Original benefits included)
Diabetic retinopathy screening (diabetics)Covered: 20% after deductibleCovered (Original benefits included)
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD)Covered when medically necessaryCovered (Original benefits included)
Cataract surgery + standard IOLCovered: 20% after deductibleCovered (often $0 or low copay)
Eyeglasses (post-cataract only)One pair, 20% after deductibleIncluded + additional allowance
Routine eyeglasses (non-cataract)NOT coveredUsually $100-$300 allowance
Routine contact lensesNOT coveredOften $100-$200 allowance

2026 Part B annual deductible is $257 (per CMS). Coinsurance is 20% of the Medicare-approved amount.

The Glaucoma Screening Benefit

Medicare Part B covers one glaucoma screening every 12 months for high-risk patients. Per CMS, high risk is defined as:

  • People with diabetes
  • People with a family history of glaucoma
  • African Americans aged 50 or older
  • Hispanic Americans aged 65 or older

You pay 20% of the Medicare-approved amount after meeting the Part B deductible. See the dedicated glaucoma test cost page for full detail.

The Cataract Surgery Benefit

Medicare Part B covers medically necessary cataract surgery, including:

  • Pre-operative evaluation (A-scan biometry, IOL calculation)
  • The surgical facility fee
  • The surgeon's fee
  • A standard monofocal intraocular lens (IOL)
  • Post-operative follow-up
  • One pair of standard eyeglasses OR one set of contact lenses after surgery

Premium IOLs (multifocal, toric for astigmatism, light-adjustable) are NOT covered. You pay the difference between the standard IOL price and the premium IOL price (typically $1,500-$3,000 per eye).

FAQ

Does Medicare cover eye exams in 2026?

Original Medicare covers medically necessary exams (glaucoma, AMD, diabetic retinopathy, cataract) but NOT routine vision tests. Medicare Advantage often includes routine.

What is the Part B eye exam copay?

20% of Medicare-approved amount after the $257 (2026) deductible. Medigap may cover the coinsurance.

Does Medicare cover glasses?

Only one pair after cataract surgery (Part B). Medicare Advantage often includes a $100-$300 glasses allowance.

What is the difference between Part B and Medicare Advantage?

Part B is medical-only; Medicare Advantage bundles A + B and typically adds routine vision benefits.

Does Medicare cover LASIK?

No. LASIK is considered elective and is not covered by Original Medicare or most Medicare Advantage plans.

Sources

Coverage varies by specific plan and county. Verify benefits with Medicare or your Medicare Advantage carrier before booking.

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Updated 2026-05-11