July is Healthy Vision Month — Let’s Talk About That “Money-Making” Benefit You’re Sleeping On

Your vision plan? It’s out here doing more for your wallet than you probably realize — if you actually use it.
Here’s the tea: the average person pays about $8 a month for individual vision coverage. That’s literally two fancy iced coffees, a sad half sandwich, or one of those mystery subscriptions you forgot to cancel.
But that $8? It does the most:
- Eye exam? $10 copay (usually). Without it, you’re paying $50–$100 easy.
- Frames or lenses? Most plans toss you $150 a year to spend. That’s real money back in your pocket (and better glasses on your face).
So yes — your vision plan is basically printing money if you actually use it. And don’t get me started on what else an eye exam can catch: high blood pressure, diabetes, all kinds of sneak attacks on your health. It’s not just about seeing the TV better — it’s about seeing life clearer.
So be for real: when’s the last time you got new glasses you actually liked? Or went to your eye doc without side-eyeing the bill?
✨ If you’re an employer:
Vision is one of the cheapest, easiest ways to show your people you care — and they love it. Tiny perk, big loyalty.
Moral of the story: If you’ve got the benefit — use it. Healthy Vision Month is your sign. Stop squinting at the world when your insurance is begging you to fix it.
Got questions about adding vision coverage for your crew? Or whether you’re still getting the best bang for your buck? Slide into my inbox.


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