...My home use pair are from Zenni, as noted above, around $100 w progressive prescription.
Think hard about which prescription you use based on what you do at work. If you are walking around in an observer role, your normal prescription may be fine. But if doing up close work where your readers are more appropriate, then get safety rated cheaters, you will be much more comfortable. Zenni also offers "computer" use glasses, designed for arms length work, reading a screen, which are great if you stare at the screen a lot.
I recently purchased a set of safety glasses from Zenni (along with a spare pair of regular glasses). The Z87.1 ran me $106 with trivex single-prescription lenses (I find trivex to be a good step up from polycarbonate, having owned both over the years, and those are really your only two safety lens options on the market). I bought the metal frames with side shields (749211), and they're ok, but they're not premium frames that I'd expect to hold up to everyday use for long, and the stamped stainless temples leave you with no way to adjust the ear fit, so they're not all that comfortable. This particular frame doesn't sit too close to my eyebrows, so I don't get fogging, but that also means that without some coverage from above (like a hat or face shield), they'll let slow moving objects arc over the top and into my eyes.
My favorite part is that they hold my clip on dental magnifiers better than any other frames I own (my day to day glasses are minimalist frameless and just can't carry that weight).
I bought mine to be shop glasses, and as such I decided to knock 0.75 off the sphere from each eye to be better for up-close work. I
think I could still pass a DMV eye test with these on, but I didn't buy them to drive, and they're not really comfortable for distance. Anyway, it's a compromise I made for myself that I'm happy with.
If you do plan to go with Zenni, ask if you can get your interpupillary distance measurement when you get your prescription. That's usually a job for the optometrist, and while Zenni will say you can measure it yourself or have someone just hold up a ruler to your eyes, it's not that simple. Your eyes will naturally converge on what you're looking at, which means that your pupils will get a little closer together as you look at things close up. So, if you focus on that ruler, you'll be measuring the PD measurement at that really close up distance. At least if you have someone else looking at the ruler, you can try to focus on a distant object. Though if you're using these as close-up-work shop glasses like me, then the shorter PD may be fine. Just food for thought.