Opticians

AI Overlap Index
49.5 / 100
Partially Exposed

Clear pressure on routine tasks. Composition of the role will shift within the decade.

SOC 29-2081 · Healthcare

Bureau of Labor Statistics
Median pay
$46,560/yr
Hourly
$22/hr
Jobs 2024
79,900
Projected 2034
82,200
10-yr outlook
+3% · As fast as average
Employment change
2,300
Entry education
High school diploma or equivalent
SOC code
29-2081

Signal composition

how the 0-100 score is assembled

Task Automation Impact weight 60%
47.1
contribution to AOI: 28.3
Automation Potential weight 10%
40.0
contribution to AOI: 4.0
Market Pressure weight 15%
45.0
contribution to AOI: 6.8
Entry Barrier Erosion weight 15%
70.0
contribution to AOI: 10.5

By seniority

multiplicative adjustment from category curve

Entry
54.5
mult 1.10x
Mid
49.5
mult 1.00x
Senior
40.6
mult 0.82x

Entry-level roles carry the brunt because they concentrate the most automatable subset of tasks. Senior work is insulated by judgment, relationships, and accountability.

Task-level analysis

scored 0-100 for current-generation AI feasibility, weighted by BLS-stated importance

11 tasks · model: claude-sonnet-4-5-20250929
Supporting t9

Maintain sales records and prepare invoices

Recording sales transactions and generating invoices are highly structured data entry and document generation tasks. Modern POS and accounting systems with AI integration can automate nearly all aspects, requiring only minimal human oversight for exceptions.

BLS evidence: Opticians often have administrative tasks, such as maintaining sales records and preparing invoices.

88
automation
Important t4

Create work orders for optical laboratory technicians with lens specifications

Creating structured work orders from prescription data and customer selections is a data transformation task well-suited to AI. Current systems can automatically populate forms, calculate specifications, and route orders with minimal human intervention beyond initial validation.

BLS evidence: After finalizing a customer's selections, the optician creates a work order for an ophthalmic laboratory technician.

82
automation
Supporting t10

Order and maintain inventory of eyewear products

AI inventory management systems can track stock levels, predict demand, and automatically generate purchase orders based on sales patterns and lead times. While humans may review large orders, the core ordering and tracking functions are highly automatable.

BLS evidence: Other duties include ordering and maintaining inventory.

75
automation
Core t1

Receive and review customers' prescriptions for eyeglasses or contact lenses

AI vision systems can parse prescription formats and validate parameters against standards with high accuracy. The task is largely data extraction and verification, which current OCR and document understanding models handle well, though human review of edge cases remains valuable.

BLS evidence: Opticians review prescriptions that customers receive from optometrists and ophthalmologists.

72
automation
Important t7

Educate customers about caring for eyewear and contact lenses

AI chatbots and video systems can deliver standardized care instructions, answer common questions, and provide visual demonstrations. While personalized troubleshooting benefits from human interaction, the bulk of routine education can be automated through interactive digital systems.

BLS evidence: Opticians educate customers about caring for eyewear and provide instruction about caring for eyewear in ways that customers understand.

68
automation
Core t3

Help customers choose eyeglass frames and lens treatments based on needs and lifestyle

AI recommendation systems can analyze face shape, prescription needs, and lifestyle inputs to suggest frames, and virtual try-on technology exists. However, the interpersonal dynamics, real-time feedback on appearance preferences, and trust-building aspects mean humans remain central to the decision process.

BLS evidence: Opticians also help customers select eyewear based on the customer's prescription, lifestyle, and other factors.

48
automation
Core t2

Measure customers' eyes and faces using computerized or manual tools

While computerized measurement tools exist, the physical act of positioning equipment, ensuring customer cooperation, and handling the variability of real-world measurement scenarios requires hands-on human presence. AI can assist with data recording but cannot perform the physical measurement independently.

BLS evidence: The optician measures the customer's face and head using a variety of computerized or manual tools, such as a pupillary distance ruler, to ensure the eyewear will fit properly.

35
automation
Important t8

Cut lenses and insert lenses into frames

Automated lens cutting and edging machines exist, but the physical handling of lenses, precise alignment in frames, and quality control in a retail environment still require human operators. The task involves physical manipulation in semi-structured settings where robotics remains limited.

BLS evidence: Some opticians cut lenses and insert the lenses into frames themselves.

25
automation
Supporting t11

Set up, organize, and clean product displays

Physical arrangement of products, cleaning displays, and aesthetic merchandising in a retail space require manual labor, spatial reasoning in dynamic environments, and subjective design judgment that robotics cannot yet replicate cost-effectively.

BLS evidence: Other duties may include setting up, organizing, and cleaning product displays.

18
automation
Important t5

Adjust, repair, and replace eyewear for proper fit and function

Physical adjustment of frames requires fine motor skills, tactile feedback, and real-time assessment of fit on a human face in an unpredictable environment. Repair work involves manual dexterity with small parts that current robotics cannot reliably replicate in a retail setting.

BLS evidence: Opticians also assist customers with details related to the finished product, such as adjusting eyeglasses for precise fit.

12
automation
Important t6

Assist customers with inserting and removing contact lenses

This requires direct physical contact with customers' eyes, real-time coaching based on individual responses, and fine motor control in a sensitive area. The liability, trust requirements, and physical manipulation make this essentially unautomatable with current technology.

BLS evidence: Opticians assist customers with inserting and removing contact lenses and ensuring proper insertion or removal of contact lenses.

8
automation

Task heatmap

automation score by task, sorted by weighted contribution

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External signals and sources

category-level priors and BLS fields that feed the four non-task signals

Automation Potential
40
karpathy 4/10
  • Karpathy/BLS Digital AI Exposure (0-10 scale rescaled to 0-100)
Market Pressure
45
outlook: As fast as average
  • BLS projected outlook: As fast as average (3%)
  • Indeed demand signal (monthly refresh pending)
Entry Barrier Erosion
70
ed: High school diploma or equivalent
  • BLS typical entry-level education: High school diploma or equivalent
  • Credential trend signal (annual refresh)

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