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States vary in how long an eyeglass or contact lens prescription is good for. Some are good for one year, some are good for two. I don't know about longer. Can only go on my experience.
OP, normally it's good for 1 year. You should always use the latest RX if there has been a change from the previous visit. Checking with your eye doctor would be the wisest. If there has been a minimal change he may suggest you decide if you want to get new glasses and or wait until your next checkup.
How late is it too late to make eyeglasses after doctor's optical prescription?
If I have optical prescriptions from different times, will I be able to use any of them to make eyeglasses?
As the others here have astutely mentioned, the convention is 1 year. Of course, your eyes may not have changed during that time and an old prescriptions will do fine, but opticians and optometrists have bills to pay too.
Most opticians refuse to make lenses from a Rx that is more than one year old, but that has absolutely nothing to do with reality. For example, if you have had cataract surgery, every eye professional knows that it is medically impossible for your Rx to change, but they will still refuse to fill it, until you hand over another wad of bills to their friend and neighbor, the optometrist.
As far as I know, there is no state that has actually enacted a law that an optician may not legally use an old Rx to make glasses (my state certainly has not). But the opticians will lie to you and imply, if not state, that it is the law.
Meanwhile, go ahead and order all the glasses you want online for ten bucks a pair. If your optician refuses to honor your Rx and you take your business elsewhere, it's their loss.
Most opticians refuse to make lenses from a Rx that is more than one year old, but that has absolutely nothing to do with reality. For example, if you have had cataract surgery, every eye professional knows that it is medically impossible for your Rx to change, but they will still refuse to fill it, until you hand over another wad of bills to their friend and neighbor, the optometrist.
As far as I know, there is no state that has actually enacted a law that an optician may not legally use an old Rx to make glasses (my state certainly has not). But the opticians will lie to you and imply, if not state, that it is the law.
Meanwhile, go ahead and order all the glasses you want online for ten bucks a pair. If your optician refuses to honor your Rx and you take your business elsewhere, it's their loss.
My husband damaged his frames and wanted to get new glasses so he took his old prescription (2 yrs old) to one of the chain optic centers and they refused to fill the prescription because it was older than one year. But the guy at the counter told us that if he had just brought in his glasses they could have taken the prescription off of them for the replacement glasses. So we went to a different chain optic center and handed over the glasses and they made new glasses based upon those glasses' prescription. So if you don't want to get a new prescription, just have them make lenses off of your old glasses.
20yrsinBranson
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