Compare 4 opticians in Sacramento, CA. Check ratings, insurance, and availability.
4
Opticians
100%
Accepting patients
50%
Most common: RDO
Ranked by Clarity Score, based on profile detail, verification, and patient activity.
Sacramento is California's capital and its quiet healthcare anchor for the Central Valley. UC Davis Medical Center gives the region academic-caliber care, while Sutter, Dignity Health, and Kaiser form a competitive triad that keeps the metro well-served. It's a city where you can see a specialist without the wait times or costs of the Bay Area.
Sacramento has 4 opticians. The most common credential is RDO (50%). 100% are currently accepting new patients.
Sacramento's grid layout makes healthcare navigation simpler than in most California metros. The medical corridor along Stockton Boulevard near UC Davis Medical Center is the densest provider zone. Sutter Medical Center sits in Midtown, and Mercy General anchors the Arden-Arcade area off Highway 50. Suburban patients in Elk Grove, Roseville, and Folsom have satellite facilities from all three major systems.
Providers practice throughout Sacramento. Midtown is a walkable grid with Sutter Medical Center and numerous specialist offices along J and K Streets. East Sacramento is a tree-lined residential area with family practices and close proximity to UC Davis Medical Center. Land Park is a central neighborhood near Sutter and Mercy hospitals, popular with families. Natomas is a newer suburban area in north Sacramento with Kaiser Permanente and Dignity Health outpatient centers.
Nearby hospitals include UC Davis Medical Center, Sutter Medical Center Sacramento, and Mercy General Hospital. Local training programs run through University of California, Davis (nearby) and California State University, Sacramento. Sacramento is home to the UC Davis Medical Center, a Level I trauma center and academic medical hub.
When selecting new glasses, the optician will review your prescription, ask about your visual needs (computer use, driving, reading), and recommend lens types and coatings. They will help you try on frames and suggest styles that fit your face shape and size. Measurements are taken for lens placement. The glasses are typically ready in one to two weeks. At pickup, the optician verifies the prescription accuracy and adjusts the frames to fit comfortably. Contact lens fittings involve the optician teaching insertion and removal and verifying the fit based on the prescribing doctor's parameters.
You see an optician after your eye doctor writes a prescription for glasses or contacts. The optician at the optical shop or department helps you choose frames, determines the best lens options (single vision, bifocal, progressive, anti-reflective coating, blue light filtering), takes precise measurements, and orders your lenses. You also see an optician for adjustments when your glasses feel crooked or uncomfortable, for repairs (tightening screws, replacing nose pads), and when you are ready for new frames.
Glasses with insurance: $0-100 copay after frame allowance · Glasses without insurance: $100-600+ · Contact lens fitting: $50-200 · Progressive lenses: $150-500 upgrade · Anti-reflective coating: $50-150 upgrade
Sacramento, CA has 4 licensed opticians. 100% are currently accepting new patients, so finding an available provider should be straightforward.
Yes. 100% of opticians in Sacramento, CA are currently accepting new patients. You can filter your search on FindClarity to show only providers who are taking new patients.
Glasses with insurance are $0 to $100 copay after frame allowance. Glasses without insurance cost $100 to $600+. A contact lens fitting costs $50 to $200. Progressive lenses are $150 to $500 upgrade. Anti-reflective coating is $50 to $150 upgrade. Actual costs in Sacramento, CA depend on the provider and your insurance plan. Vision insurance frame allowances ($100-$200) rarely cover premium frames. Ask the optician about budget-friendly options or use your allowance for quality lenses with a simpler frame. FSA/HSA funds cover glasses and contacts.
Sacramento has four major healthcare systems: UC Davis Health (academic, Level I trauma), Sutter Health (largest by market share, multiple campuses), Dignity Health/CommonSpirit (Mercy General and Mercy hospitals), and Kaiser Permanente (closed network with facilities in several Sacramento neighborhoods). Choosing one system for primary care and specialists keeps your records in one place.
Some opticians in Sacramento, CA accept Medi-Cal, the state's Medicaid program. Medicaid covers eyeglasses for children in all states. Adult vision coverage varies by state. Where covered, a basic frame and lenses are typically included. Contact the provider's office directly to confirm Medi-Cal participation before scheduling.
You visit an optician when getting new glasses or contacts (typically once per year after your eye exam). Adjustment and repair visits can be done anytime. No appointment is needed for minor adjustments. With 4 opticians in Sacramento, CA, you can search on FindClarity to find a provider who fits your schedule.
Opticians in the area may have trained at UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine, UCSF School of Medicine, and Stanford University School of Medicine. Graduates of local programs often stay in the area to practice.
Generally, yes. Provider fees, copays for non-Kaiser plans, and out-of-pocket costs tend to be 15-25% lower in Sacramento than in San Francisco or San Jose. Housing costs for healthcare workers are also lower, which supports a more stable provider workforce.
UC Davis Medical Center is the region's only Level I trauma center and the destination for the most serious injuries and complex emergencies. For standard ER visits, Sutter Medical Center in Midtown, Mercy General in Arden-Arcade, and Kaiser South Sacramento all have emergency departments.
Vision insurance covers eyeglasses with a frame allowance and lens benefit, typically once per year. Common vision plans (VSP, EyeMed) provide $100 to $200 toward frames and cover standard lenses with copays for upgrades. Contact lens coverage is usually either a fitting fee plus allowance or a materials allowance. FSA and HSA funds can be used for glasses and contacts. If you do not have vision insurance, online retailers and warehouse clubs offer competitive pricing. Medical insurance (not vision) covers glasses after cataract surgery.