What you are paying for when the optometrist comes to you
Strip a home eye test quote down and it has four ingredients: the professional's time, the travel, the portable equipment, and the licensing overhead. The clinical part — a refraction to measure your prescription, visual acuity checks, and basic screening — takes a trained optometrist 30 to 45 minutes per adult. The travel can easily double the time cost of the appointment, which is why a visit to a Palm Jumeirah villa and a visit two streets from the provider's base can be quoted differently even for identical tests.
The equipment matters more than most customers realise. A provider working with a trial frame and loose lenses is running a leaner kit than one carrying a portable autorefractor, a handheld tonometer for eye pressure, or a fundus camera for retinal photos. Both can produce an accurate prescription in experienced hands, but the second setup justifies a higher quote because it screens for conditions a lens box cannot see. When you compare prices, you are really comparing kit lists — so ask for one.
The AED 150–400 spread: what moves a quote up or down
The typical UAE market range for a home eye test is AED 150–400, and the position of any single quote inside that band is rarely random. A straightforward refraction for one adult who already wears glasses sits at the lower end. Add digital screening (retinal imaging, eye pressure), a first-ever test that needs a fuller history, or a contact lens assessment, and you move toward the top. Evening and Friday-morning slots often carry a premium of roughly AED 30–100 because that is when working residents actually want them.
Location is the other quiet variable. Providers cluster in Dubai and Sharjah, so an address in Ras Al Khaimah, Fujairah or Al Ain frequently attracts a travel component that a Dubai Marina booking does not. Some vendors fold this into the headline price; others list it separately. Neither approach is dishonest, but it makes headline-price comparison misleading — always compare the total for your address, not the advertised starting figure. In the tamam app you can see several verified vendors' AED ranges side by side for your location before you commit, which removes most of the guesswork.
Where people overpay on home eye tests
The most common overpayment is buying a comprehensive package when a basic refraction would do. If you are 32, healthy, and your glasses feel slightly weak, you need a prescription update — an AED 150–300 job — not the full screening tier. The reverse is also true and costlier long-term: parents of a child squinting at the whiteboard, or adult children of a diabetic parent, sometimes buy the cheapest possible test when their situation specifically calls for the fuller work-up.
The second leak is the bundled-glasses upsell. Some low headline prices are effectively subsidised by the expectation that you will buy frames and lenses from the same provider at uncompetitive prices. There is nothing wrong with buying from the tester if the price is fair, but insist on a written, portable prescription first — it is yours, and any optical shop in the UAE must be able to fill it. The third leak is paying multiple call-outs for one household: almost every provider offers a reduced per-person rate, typically AED 80–200 for each additional family member tested in the same visit, and people routinely fail to ask.
Driving licence vision tests: do not pay for the same test twice
Here is the trap worth AED 150–400 of wasted money: a standard home eye test does not usually produce the certificate you need for a UAE driving licence. In Dubai, the RTA accepts vision results only from accredited optical centres, which submit them electronically to the licensing system; Abu Dhabi and the Northern Emirates run equivalent approved-centre arrangements. Unless the home provider explicitly states it is accredited to file licence eye tests with the relevant authority — and most mobile services are not — the certificate will still require a short visit to an approved optician.
So where does a home test fit? As preparation, and it can be genuinely good value. If you suspect your vision has slipped since your last renewal, a home test tells you privately whether you will pass and lets you sort out updated glasses before the official test, rather than failing at the counter and scrambling. For older drivers renewing a licence, it also flags issues like early cataract that would otherwise surface at the worst possible moment. Just be clear-eyed about what you are buying: preparation and a prescription, not the RTA paperwork itself. Ask the vendor directly before booking.
Kids, screens and myopia: why early testing is cheap insurance
UAE children spend a lot of time on screens and indoors, especially through the summer months when outdoor play collapses in the heat — and sustained near work with limited daylight exposure is associated with earlier onset and faster progression of myopia (short-sightedness). No home test can prevent that, and be wary of anyone claiming a product will cure it. What early testing does is catch progression while the management options are widest and cheapest: standard lenses updated on time cost far less over a childhood than late-detected, fast-progressing myopia that may warrant specialist myopia-management lenses.
A home test for a child typically runs AED 150–350 and has a practical advantage clinics cannot match: children behave more naturally at home, which matters because a fidgety, anxious child produces unreliable readings. A good paediatric-experienced optometrist will use picture charts for pre-readers and will tell you plainly when a child needs a clinic instead — very young children, or any child who may need cycloplegic drops (which relax focusing for an accurate reading), should be referred to an ophthalmology clinic rather than tested on the sofa. Treat that referral as a sign of a competent provider, not a failed visit.
On value: an annual test through the school years is one of the cheaper line items in a UAE childhood. Compare it with the downstream cost of a child struggling in class for two terms before anyone checks their eyes, and the maths is not close.
Contact lens fittings at home: why they cost more than a basic test
A contact lens fitting is not a refraction with lenses thrown in, and the price reflects that. The optometrist must measure the curvature of your cornea, assess tear film and eye surface health, select trial lenses, check how they sit on the eye, and — for first-time wearers — teach insertion, removal and hygiene until you can do it safely alone. As a home add-on this typically costs AED 100–250 on top of the base test, and a first-time fitting visit can run noticeably longer than a glasses-only appointment.
The value case is strong precisely because a bad fitting is expensive. Buying six months of lenses in the wrong base curve or a material your eyes dislike wastes far more than the fitting fee, and poorly fitted lenses carry real health risks, from chronic dryness to corneal problems. One honest boundary: complex fittings — high astigmatism, multifocal lenses, or any history of eye surface disease — are better handled in a clinic with a slit lamp. A reputable mobile optometrist will say so and refer you rather than improvise.
Cataract screening for elderly relatives: the referral is the product
For families with elderly parents in the UAE — including parents visiting on long-stay family visas — a home visit solves a genuine access problem. Getting a frail 78-year-old to a mall optician involves transport, walking distance, queues and heat; a licensed optometrist coming to the majlis removes all of it. A screening visit at AED 200–400 checks acuity, examines the lens for clouding, and can include eye pressure and retinal checks depending on the kit carried.
Understand what you are buying, though: screening and referral, not diagnosis or treatment. Cataract assessment and surgery decisions belong to an ophthalmologist, and the real product of the home visit is a clear written report saying either 'no urgent concern, recheck in twelve months' or 'refer to an eye clinic now'. That referral, made six months earlier than it otherwise would have been, is where the value sits — earlier assessment generally means more options and a smoother path. See a doctor promptly, without waiting for any home visit, if an older relative reports sudden vision loss, flashes and new floaters, eye pain, or a curtain across their vision; those are emergency symptoms, not screening material.
Licensing: who is actually allowed to test your eyes at home
Eye testing in the UAE is a regulated clinical activity. Practitioners must hold a licence from the relevant health authority — DHA in Dubai, the Department of Health in Abu Dhabi, and MOHAP across Sharjah and the Northern Emirates — and home healthcare providers need appropriate authorisation to deliver services at your address rather than in a facility. This is not bureaucratic trivia; it is the difference between a clinical measurement you can act on and a guess from someone with a lens kit.
Verification takes two minutes and costs nothing: ask for the practitioner's licence number and issuing authority before the visit, and expect the answer without hesitation. Vendors listed on tamam are verified before they appear in the app, which handles the first filter, but there is no harm in asking again at the door. An unlicensed test is not a bargain at any price — a wrong prescription means headaches, wasted glasses, and in the worst case a missed sign of something that needed a doctor.
How to compare quotes like an analyst
Two quotes are only comparable when they describe the same scope, so make every vendor answer the same five questions. What exactly is included — refraction only, or screening for pressure and retinal health too? What equipment do you bring? Will I receive a full written prescription I can use at any optical shop, including pupillary distance? What is the per-person rate for additional family members on the same visit? And is there any travel charge for my address? A vendor who answers crisply is telling you something about how they run their clinical work as well.
Then weigh the answers against your actual need, not the richest package on offer. A young adult updating a prescription should be comparing the low end of the AED 150–400 band; a family bundling two kids and a grandparent into one visit should be comparing per-person bundle totals; someone with diabetes or a family history of glaucoma should be comparing screening capability, not price alone. Because tamam shows multiple verified vendors with transparent AED ranges rather than one fixed rate, you can run exactly this comparison before booking, then coordinate details over WhatsApp if your building or timing needs explaining.
Total cost of ownership: the test is the cheap part
Over a few years of glasses, lenses and re-tests, the eye tests themselves are a minor line item — what they control is the much larger downstream spend. An accurate, independent prescription lets you buy frames and lenses wherever the value is best instead of being captive to whoever tested you. A test skipped for three years quietly costs money too: driving on an outdated prescription, replacing 'faulty' glasses that were never the problem, or a child's slipping school performance that a twenty-minute check would have explained.
Continuity has a value that is easy to miss when comparing one-off quotes. An optometrist who tested you last year works faster and catches change more reliably than a stranger starting from zero, which is the argument for rebooking the same vendor rather than re-shopping the market every time — tamam's same-vendor rebook exists for exactly this. The sensible pattern for most adults is a test every one to two years, annually for children and for anyone over 60 or with diabetes, with the same provider where the first experience was good. That cadence, at AED 150–400 a visit, is one of the cheaper pieces of preventive health available in the UAE.
what it costs
These are typical UAE market ranges for home visits as of mid-2026. Where a quote falls within each band depends on scope, equipment, your emirate and address, timing, and how many people are tested in one call-out.
| job | typical range |
|---|---|
| Standard home eye test with written prescription (one adult) | AED 150–300 |
| Comprehensive test with digital screening (pressure, retinal imaging) | AED 250–400 |
| Each additional family member, same visit | AED 80–200 |
| Child's eye test (school-age) | AED 150–350 |
| Contact lens fitting add-on | AED 100–250 |
| Senior screening visit with referral report | AED 200–400 |
| Evening or weekend slot premium | AED 30–100 |
Treat these bands as orientation, not offers — final pricing comes from comparing the quotes verified vendors give for your specific address and scope in the tamam app.
How a home eye test visit actually runs
Expect the optometrist to arrive with one or two cases: a trial frame and lens set, a visual acuity chart (physical or screen-based), and, on better-equipped visits, a portable autorefractor, handheld tonometer and sometimes a fundus camera. They will need a room where you can sit roughly three metres from a chart with reasonably controlled lighting — a living room with curtains you can draw works; a bright glass-walled majlis at noon does not. In apartment towers, register the visitor with security beforehand and mention if parking requires validation; in villas, a spot in the shade genuinely matters for equipment in summer.
The test itself takes about 30 to 45 minutes for one adult: history and symptoms first, then acuity, then the refraction where lenses are swapped until the prescription is dialled in, then any add-ons such as pressure checks or lens fitting. Have your current glasses and any old prescriptions ready, note your medications (several common ones affect vision), and skip contact lenses for at least a day beforehand if a fitting or precise refraction is planned — ask the vendor how long when booking. You should finish with a complete written prescription including pupillary distance, and a plain-language note of anything that needs a clinic follow-up. Payment and the booking record sit in the tamam app, which also makes rebooking the same optometrist next year a one-tap decision rather than a new search.
how it plays out emirate by emirate
dubai
Dubai has the deepest pool of DHA-licensed home healthcare providers, which keeps quotes competitive but makes scope-checking essential — the spread between a bare refraction and a full screening visit is widest here. Tower living is the practical wrinkle: Marina, Downtown and JLT buildings usually require the practitioner to register at security, so send the vendor your building name and add them to the visitor list in advance. Remember that RTA licence eye tests are filed electronically by accredited optical centres, so treat a home test as preparation for renewal season, not the certificate itself.
abu dhabi
Practitioners here work under Department of Health (DoH) licensing rather than DHA, so check for the right authority when verifying. Villa communities like Khalifa City, Al Reef and Mohammed Bin Zayed City are easy visits with straightforward parking, while Reem Island towers need the same security pre-registration as Dubai high-rises. Al Ain is the value trap to watch: it is a ninety-minute drive from the capital, so confirm whether a quote includes travel or whether the vendor even covers Al Ain at all — some serve it only on set days, and bundling the whole household into that one visit is the efficient play.
sharjah
Sharjah's private healthcare falls under MOHAP licensing, and its larger average household size changes the economics of a booking: with three or four children common, the per-person bundle rate matters more here than anywhere else in the country, so negotiate the whole family into one visit. Parking around Al Majaz, Al Nahda and Al Taawun towers is genuinely difficult at peak hours — a vendor who arrives flustered after twenty minutes circling is not at their clinical best, so offer your building's visitor parking details upfront. Weekends book out early because so many residents commute to Dubai on weekdays.
ajman
Ajman has few resident mobile optometry providers of its own; most visits are served by vendors travelling up from Sharjah, so the first question to ask is whether the quoted range already includes travel to your address. Corniche and Al Rashidiya towers are quick stops on a Sharjah run, while villa areas like Al Mowaihat and Al Zahya may attract a small distance component. Ajman's comparatively low rents mean many multi-generational households, which suits the bundle model well — a grandparent's screening, a parent's prescription update and a child's check in one call-out is the best value shape here.
ras al khaimah
Distance drives cost in RAK more than test scope does. Providers typically travel from Dubai or Sharjah, and the emirate is long — Al Hamra Village and Mina Al Arab in the south are a materially different trip from RAK City or Al Rams in the north, so quote comparisons only work address-to-address. The south's resort communities house many older long-stay residents and retirees, which makes cataract and general senior screening a disproportionate share of local demand; if that is your booking, ask specifically whether the practitioner carries pressure-measurement and retinal-imaging kit before paying a premium rate.
fujairah
The east coast is the thinnest market in the country for mobile optometry: most providers cross from Sharjah or Dubai through the mountains, and many serve Fujairah only on scheduled days rather than on demand. Book a week or more ahead, be flexible on the time window, and consolidate — this is the emirate where testing the entire household, and even coordinating with a neighbour who also needs a visit, moves the per-person cost furthest. Dibba sits at the far end of an already long trip, so confirm coverage explicitly. Licensing here is MOHAP, the same authority as the other Northern Emirates.
umm al quwain
For licence renewals, Umm Al Quwain drivers mostly use approved optical centres in the neighbouring emirates, so the home eye test here is really about everything else: school-age screening, contact lens refits, and elderly residents who cannot easily make the trip down E11. Optometrists travel in with portable kit, so evening slots book out first. If the test surfaces cataract or retina flags, referrals typically point to Sharjah or Dubai specialists — ask for the written result to carry forward.
Before the optometrist rings your doorbell
- Verify the practitioner's licence number and issuing authority (DHA, DoH or MOHAP) when booking, not at the door.
- Get the scope in writing: refraction only, or screening for eye pressure and retinal health included.
- Confirm the total for your address — travel charges, timing premiums and per-person bundle rates included.
- Add every family member who is due a test to the same visit and agree the bundle price upfront.
- Dig out your current glasses, old prescriptions and a list of medications before the appointment.
- Prepare the room: a seat about three metres from a blank wall, with lighting you can control.
- Register the visitor with building security and sort parking guidance if you live in a tower.
- If you wear contact lenses, ask how long to leave them out before the test — and actually do it.
- Do not settle payment until you hold a complete written prescription including pupillary distance.
mistakes to avoid
Assuming the home test counts for your driving licence
Licence vision certificates must come from centres accredited by the licensing authority, which file results electronically — a standard home visit is not that. People pay AED 150–400 at home, then discover they still need the approved-centre test. Use the home visit as preparation, and ask about accreditation before booking if the licence is your whole reason.
Buying the comprehensive package when you needed a refraction
If you are young, healthy and simply need updated glasses, the full screening tier is usually money spent on reassurance rather than need. Match scope to situation: screening earns its price for over-60s, diabetics, and anyone with a glaucoma family history — not for every routine prescription top-up.
Accepting a verbal prescription or a 'we'll make your glasses' promise
Without a complete written prescription including pupillary distance, you are captive to the tester's own glasses pricing. The written document is what makes the market work for you — any optical shop can fill it. No paper, no payment.
Booking separate visits for one household
The call-out cost is baked into every solo booking, so a family that books three separate visits pays the travel premium three times. Almost every vendor discounts additional people in the same visit, typically AED 80–200 each. Bundle the household, especially outside Dubai and Sharjah where travel is a bigger slice of the quote.
Waiting for a child to complain before testing
Children rarely report blurry vision because they assume everyone sees the way they do; the signals are squinting, sitting close to screens, and slipping schoolwork. By the time a child complains, myopia may have progressed for a year or more. An annual test through the school years is cheap insurance against exactly this.
Skipping the licence check because the price was good
An unlicensed test is the most expensive kind: a wrong prescription means headaches and wasted glasses, and an unqualified tester can miss signs that needed a doctor. Verifying a DHA, DoH or MOHAP licence takes two minutes. Booking through a platform that verifies vendors first handles the initial filter, but asking directly costs nothing.
frequently asked questions
Is a home eye test as accurate as one at an optical shop?
For a standard refraction, yes — the lenses and method are the same, and accuracy depends on the optometrist's skill more than the venue. Where clinics keep an edge is specialist equipment: slit lamps, cycloplegic testing for young children, and complex contact lens work. A good mobile optometrist knows this boundary and refers you when your case crosses it.
Can a home eye test give me the certificate for my UAE driving licence?
Usually not. Licence vision results must come from centres accredited by the relevant authority — RTA-approved optical centres in Dubai, equivalent approved centres elsewhere — which file results electronically. Use the home test to confirm you will pass and update your glasses first, then do the short official test at an approved centre.
Who is legally allowed to perform eye tests at home in the UAE?
A licensed optometrist working under the relevant health authority: DHA in Dubai, DoH in Abu Dhabi, MOHAP in Sharjah and the Northern Emirates, with the provider authorised for home healthcare delivery. Ask for the licence number and issuing authority before the visit; a legitimate practitioner supplies it without hesitation.
How long does a home eye test take?
Around 30 to 45 minutes for one adult having a standard test. Add roughly 20 to 30 minutes per extra family member, and more for a first-time contact lens fitting, which includes teaching insertion and removal. Book a window, not a minute — travel between visits makes exact arrival times unrealistic.
How often should I actually get my eyes tested?
Every one to two years for healthy adults, annually for children, and annually for anyone over 60 or living with diabetes or a family history of glaucoma. Sooner if you notice headaches, night-driving difficulty, or your current glasses feeling wrong — those are symptoms, not scheduling questions.
From what age can children be tested at home?
School-age children generally test well at home, often better than in an unfamiliar clinic, using picture-based charts for pre-readers. Toddlers and any child who may need cycloplegic drops for an accurate reading belong in a paediatric eye clinic. Expect an honest mobile optometrist to draw that line for you.
Do I get a prescription I can use at any optical shop?
You should, and you should not pay until you have it. Insist on a complete written prescription — sphere, cylinder, axis, and pupillary distance — with the practitioner's name and licence details. That document is portable: any optical shop in the UAE can fill it, which is what keeps your glasses purchase competitive.
Does health insurance cover home eye tests?
Routine optical services sit outside many basic UAE plans, and home visits are covered less often than clinic visits even on enhanced plans. Some policies with optical benefits reimburse the test if you submit the licensed provider's invoice. Check your policy's optical benefit and its home-care terms before assuming either way.
What happens if the optometrist finds something serious?
You get a referral, not treatment — an optometrist screens and prescribes lenses but does not diagnose or treat eye disease at home. A finding such as raised eye pressure or a suspicious retinal appearance should come with a written note recommending an ophthalmologist, and urgency guidance. Sudden vision loss, flashes with new floaters, or eye pain need same-day medical care, not a booked home visit.
Can I get a contact lens fitting in the same visit as my eye test?
Often yes, as an add-on of roughly AED 100–250, provided you flag it when booking so the optometrist brings trial lenses and allows extra time. First-time wearers should expect the visit to run longer for insertion and removal training. Complex prescriptions — high astigmatism, multifocals — may still be referred to a clinic.
Why do two vendors quote such different prices for the same test?
Because it is rarely the same test. Differences in screening scope, equipment carried, travel distance to your address, timing premiums and family bundling all move a quote within the AED 150–400 band. Make both vendors itemise what is included and compare totals for your exact address and household — the gap usually explains itself.
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