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Consumer Insights into how Americans prioritize and optimize eyecare.
Jan. 29, 2025
The Vision Council released Consumer inSights Q4 2024, a new report examining the views and behaviors of U.S. adults in relation to vision correction, managed vision care, eye exams, prescription eyewear, reading glasses and non-prescription sunglasses.
The findings from the last quarter of 2024 offer an updated, comprehensive overview of the optical industry based on consumer choices and habits.
“Through our final Consumer inSights survey of 2024, we found that the majority of U.S. consumers remained largely consistent with how they approach eye exams and prioritize their vision health throughout the year,” said Alysse Henkel, Vice-President of Research and inSights at The Vision Council. “This data offers insight into consumer behaviors from the last quarter of the year, as well as the opportunity to see what has changed, or stayed the same, with trended data going back three years.”
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Findings from this quarter show a continued preference for lower-cost non-prescription eyewear, as 58 percent of respondents reported spending less than $50 on a recent sunglasses purchase, and the number of consumers buying reading glasses that cost $10 or less increased substantially from Q2 (up 12 percent).
While the $100 or-less category still dominates for prescription eyewear, the report shows that the number of consumers purchasing new prescription eyewear costing $200 or more is slightly increasing, especially across online purchases.
Additional Key Highlights for Q4 2024
- Sixty-one percent of respondents had an eye exam in the past year, holding steady from previous quarters; however, 22 percent of respondents have gone more than two years without an exam.
- The majority (86 percent) of eyeglass purchases occur in-person. Of those with an eye exam in the last three months who also purchased prescription eyewear, 78 percent purchased their eyewear from their exam provider.
- Thirty-five percent of recent contact lens purchases were made online, down 5 percent from Q3. Many consumers (51 percent) are buying smaller supplies lasting three months or less.
- Sixty-seven percent of respondents report having some form of managed vision care coverage.
- Employer-sponsored managed vision care programs declined slightly to 47 percent in Q4, down from 50 percent in the previous quarter; and government-sponsored coverage saw a 2 percent increase from Q3.
- Forty-nine percent of Gen Z respondents reported employer coverage of managed vision care, compared to 58 percent of Gen X respondents.
The Vision Council’s Consumer inSights Q4 2024 findings are the result of a survey of 12,021 adults in the U.S. aged 18 or older in the last quarter of 2024. Respondents are representative of the U.S. adult population. The survey included questions about vision correction, managed vision care, eye exams, prescription eyewear, reading glasses and plano sunglasses.
This report focuses primarily on data from the fourth quarter of 2024 as part of The Vision Council’s updated Consumer inSights survey that began in January of 2022.
Three years of trended data can be accessed, along with the full report in The Vision Council’s Research Download Center as a complimentary download for members of The Vision Council, with a paid option for non-members.
