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VA Healthcare

Vision: routine care the VA covers, exceptions Medicare allows

Medicare excludes routine vision care and eyeglasses (post-cataract glasses excepted); the VA covers routine eye exams for enrolled veterans and provides eyeglasses to specific categories — service-connected conditions, A&A recipients, former POWs — while VA blind rehabilitation stands alone as the best low-vision program in American healthcare.

What each system actually covers

Medicare's vision rules are exception-shaped: no routine exams, no glasses or contacts — except one pair of corrective lenses after cataract surgery with an implanted lens, plus medically necessary eye care (annual diabetic eye exams, glaucoma screening for high-risk beneficiaries, macular degeneration treatment, the surgery itself). The VA inverts it: routine eye exams are part of standard VA care for enrolled veterans — vision screening sits inside your preventive care — while eyeglasses follow an eligibility list that mirrors the hearing-aid gates: compensable service-connected ratings, service-connected eye conditions (including 0%), former POWs, Purple Heart recipients, A&A/housebound recipients, and veterans whose vision problems stem from or interfere with treatment of a medical condition.

The routing table

NeedVAMedicareOther lanes
Routine eye examCovered for enrolled veteransNot coveredMA plans commonly include one
EyeglassesFree for the eligibility categories abovePost-cataract pair onlyMA eyewear allowances; FEDVIP vision plans (retirees); HSA dollars
Cataract surgeryCovered VA careCovered (Part B) + one pair of glasses afterThe one place Medicare hands out eyewear
Diabetic / glaucoma / AMD careCoveredCovered as medical eye careRoute to whichever doctor anchors the condition
Low vision & blindnessBlind Rehabilitation — see belowLimited rehab pieces

Blind rehabilitation: the benefit without a civilian equal

For veterans with significant vision loss, the VA runs a system nothing in Medicare resembles: VIST coordinators (Visual Impairment Services Team) at medical centers who case-manage the whole journey, inpatient Blind Rehabilitation Centers teaching independent living, mobility, and technology over multi-week programs, and adaptive equipment — magnifiers, screen readers, navigation devices — issued at no cost. Eligibility runs on clinical vision loss for enrolled veterans, not on ratings. If macular degeneration or glaucoma is taking a veteran's sight, the VIST referral is the single most valuable phone call on this page — ask primary care, or 877-222-8387.

Your benefits mix is unique. A licensed agent can review how Medicare options coordinate with your VA, TRICARE for Life, or CHAMPVA coverage — at no cost and no obligation.

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Or compare plans yourself at PlanMatch’s comparison tool, or contact Medicare.gov / 1-800-MEDICARE.

Frequently asked questions

Does Medicare pay for eye exams or glasses?
Not routine ones — Medicare covers medical eye care (cataract surgery, diabetic exams, glaucoma screening for high-risk patients) and exactly one pair of glasses after cataract surgery with a lens implant.
Does the VA give veterans free eye exams?
Yes — routine eye exams are part of standard care for enrolled veterans. Eyeglasses additionally go free to the eligibility categories: SC ratings, SC eye conditions, POWs, Purple Heart, A&A recipients, and treatment-related needs.
What is VA blind rehabilitation?
A full system for serious vision loss — VIST coordinators, residential Blind Rehabilitation Centers, and free adaptive technology — open to enrolled veterans by clinical need, with no Medicare equivalent.
How do most veterans get everyday glasses?
Those in the VA categories, from the VA free; others through an MA plan's eyewear allowance, a FEDVIP vision plan for military retirees, or retail — payable tax-free from an HSA.

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