NHS · Annual entitlementNot medical advice. Verified May 2026 against NHSBSA + NHS DESP guidance.

Free eye test if you have diabetes

A diabetes diagnosis (Type 1 or Type 2) gives you two separate NHS entitlements: an annual NHS-funded sight test at any high street optician, plus an annual retinal photography screening through the NHS Diabetic Eye Screening Programme. Both are free. Both are useful, and they look for different things.

Two NHS programmes, side by side

The two services are commonly confused because both are free, both are annual, and both involve looking at your eyes. They are run by different parts of the NHS and check different things.

AspectNHS sight testNHS DESP screening
Run byHigh street opticiansRegional NHS DESP centres
You bookYourself, when you wantBy invitation letter once a year
LocationOptometry practiceHospital, clinic, mobile unit, or your GP surgery
What it checksVisual acuity, refraction, eye pressure, full eye healthDiabetic retinopathy specifically
EquipmentSnellen chart, phoropter, tonometer, slit lamp, ophthalmoscopeDigital retinal camera with mydriatic drops
Length20 to 30 minutes20 to 30 minutes including drops
FrequencyAnnual (more often if clinically indicated)Annual from age 12 onwards
Updates your glasses prescriptionYesNo

What the optometrist examines beyond the standard test

A standard NHS sight test covers visual acuity (sharpness on the Snellen chart), refraction (to find your prescription), intraocular pressure (a glaucoma indicator), slit lamp examination of the front of the eye, and ophthalmoscopy of the back of the eye. If you have diabetes the optometrist takes a longer look at the back of the eye and notes specific features.

The retinal examination looks for diabetic retinopathy (microaneurysms, dot and blot haemorrhages, exudates, cotton wool spots, and in more advanced disease, neovascularisation), diabetic macular oedema (thickening of the central retina), and cataract (which develops earlier and faster in diabetes). The optometrist is not the primary screening programme for retinopathy : that is DESP : but they will note findings and refer or coordinate as needed.

For context only, not as clinical advice: diabetic retinopathy is the leading cause of preventable sight loss in working-age adults in the UK. The combination of annual sight test plus annual DESP screening was introduced because both pathways together catch sight-threatening disease earlier than either alone.

How the NHS Diabetic Eye Screening Programme works

Once you are registered as having diabetes on your GP record, you are automatically invited into the NHS DESP. The first invitation arrives within around 12 weeks of diagnosis for adults, and from age 12 for children with diabetes. The invitation letter tells you the date, time, and location of your screening appointment.

At the appointment, drops are put into both eyes to dilate the pupils. The drops take around 20 minutes to work. A digital retinal camera then takes two photographs of each eye through the dilated pupil. The whole appointment takes around 30 minutes. You cannot drive home because the drops blur your vision for several hours; arrange transport.

The photographs are read by trained graders, not at the appointment. Results arrive by post within around six weeks. If background retinopathy is detected, you are recalled for annual screening as normal. If sight-threatening retinopathy or macular oedema is detected, you are referred to a hospital eye service for assessment.

Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland each run their own equivalent programmes with the same annual frequency and the same screening standards. The branding differs (DRS in Scotland, DESS in NI) but the entitlement is identical.

Why people with diabetes should use both services

DESP screens specifically for diabetic retinopathy and macular oedema. It does not check your vision sharpness, it does not update your prescription, and it does not screen for unrelated eye conditions such as glaucoma or cataract. A standard sight test does all of those things.

If you only ever attend DESP, you can develop a degraded prescription or undetected glaucoma. If you only ever attend a high street sight test, the dedicated retinal photography of DESP and the trained-grader review system can catch retinopathy features that a single optometrist look might miss. Public health policy is built on the assumption you do both.

Practical tip: book the high street sight test around 6 months offset from your DESP screening. That way you have a clinical review of your eyes roughly every six months without paying anything.

Common questions

Do I get a free eye test on the NHS if I have diabetes?

Yes. Anyone diagnosed with diabetes (Type 1 or Type 2) qualifies for a free NHS sight test at any high street optician. The eligibility applies regardless of how well controlled the diabetes is, and regardless of which medication you take. You confirm the diagnosis to the optometrist at the appointment.

Is the NHS diabetic eye screening programme the same as a sight test?

No, they are different. The NHS Diabetic Eye Screening Programme (DESP) is a separate, annual screening service run by regional NHS providers. It is a retinal photography scan to look specifically for diabetic retinopathy. A high street NHS sight test is a full visual examination covering acuity, refraction, pressure, slit lamp and retinal exam. Most people with diabetes attend both: the DESP screening once a year by invitation, and the high street sight test when they want a new prescription or glasses check.

How often does the NHS fund my sight test if I have diabetes?

Annually. The standard NHS interval is two years for adults, but diabetes is one of the categories that triggers annual funding. Your optometrist records the diabetes diagnosis on the GOS1 form and you can return for a funded test 12 months later.

What proof of diabetes diagnosis do I need at the optician?

A GP letter, a current prescription for diabetic medication, an NHS app screenshot showing your diabetes diagnosis, or a hospital diabetes clinic letter all work. Most opticians accept a verbal declaration and ask for one piece of supporting evidence on first visit.

Do I get an OCT scan for free because I have diabetes?

Not automatically. The free NHS sight test covers the standard examination. An OCT scan is a private add-on at most chains (£10 at Specsavers, £25 at Boots, often included at Vision Express). However the NHS Diabetic Eye Screening Programme uses retinal photography (a different but related modality) and is fully NHS-funded.

What does the optometrist check for that relates to diabetes?

Beyond the standard examination, the optometrist looks for signs of diabetic retinopathy (microaneurysms, dot and blot haemorrhages, exudates, neovascularisation), diabetic macular oedema, and earlier development of cataract that is more common in diabetes. Findings are noted in your record and may prompt referral to ophthalmology or coordination with your DESP team.

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Updated 2 May 2026