Question 1 of 10

When you look in a mirror, do your upper eyelids rest on or hang over your eyelashes?

Question 2 of 10

Which of the following do you find yourself doing? (Check all that apply)

Question 3 of 10

How long have you been experiencing these symptoms?

Question 4 of 10

Have you ever talked to a doctor about your eyelids affecting your vision?

Question 5 of 10

Have you had a visual field test that showed obstruction from your eyelids?

Question 6 of 10

What is your age range?

Question 7 of 10

What kind of insurance do you have?

Question 8 of 10

Are you considering surgery on your upper eyelids, lower eyelids, or both?

Question 9 of 10

Have you previously tried to get this procedure covered by insurance?

Question 10 of 10

Where should we send your personalized results?

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Good news — you likely qualify for insurance coverage.

Based on your answers, your upper eyelid drooping appears to meet the criteria most insurers — including Medicare and major private plans — use to determine medical necessity for blepharoplasty. That means there's a real chance your procedure could be fully covered.

But here's the catch: insurance approval depends entirely on documentation. Many people who qualify still get denied because their doctor didn't capture the right information in the right format. The criteria are specific, the language matters, and the process has steps that aren't obvious.

The BlephCovered Documentation Kit is the step-by-step guide that walks you through exactly what to ask your doctor, what tests to request, what codes to use, and how to handle the appeal if you're initially denied. It includes:

Get the Documentation Kit — $29

14-day refund policy. Educational content only — not medical, legal, or insurance advice.

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Your situation is borderline — but the right documentation could push it over the line.

Based on your answers, your case isn't a clear yes — but it's also not a clear no. People in your situation often qualify for insurance coverage when their documentation is strong. The difference between approval and denial is usually whether the visual field obstruction was properly tested, recorded, and presented in the language insurers expect.

Here's what typically separates successful claims from rejected ones:

The BlephCovered Documentation Kit walks you through every one of these steps. It's the same guide we'd recommend to someone in your exact situation. If you decide to pursue coverage and follow the kit's process, you'll have the strongest possible case.

Get the Documentation Kit — $29

14-day refund policy. Educational content only — not medical, legal, or insurance advice.

Retake the quiz

Insurance coverage is unlikely in your situation — here's what to know.

Based on your answers, your case probably doesn't meet the medical necessity criteria most insurers require for blepharoplasty coverage. We want to give you the honest answer instead of selling you something that won't help.

Here are the situations where insurance generally won't cover blepharoplasty:

1. Things change.

If your symptoms worsen over time, or if a doctor confirms vision obstruction in a future exam, your situation could shift. Many people who qualify today didn't qualify two years ago.

2. There are options outside of insurance.

If you decide to pursue the procedure as elective, there are reputable financing options through CareCredit and similar services that can spread the cost over 12-24 months.

We're not going to recommend you buy our Documentation Kit, because honestly, in your situation it probably won't help. We'd rather give you the straight answer than make a sale that doesn't serve you.

If your situation changes in the future, or if you'd like to revisit this assessment, you're welcome to come back and retake the quiz anytime.

Educational content only — not medical, legal, or insurance advice.

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