Your assumption is right, this is the optimal way to do it and it's called upsert/merge.
Importance of UPSERT - from sqlservercentral.com:
For every update in the case mentioned above we are removing one additional read from the table if we use the UPSERT instead of EXISTS. Unfortunately for an Insert, both the UPSERT and IF EXISTS methods use the same number of reads on the table. Therefore the check for existence should only be done when there is a very valid reason to justify the additional I/O. The optimized way to do things is to make sure that you have little reads as possible on the DB.
The best strategy is to attempt the update. If no rows are affected by the update then insert. In most circumstances, the row will already exist and only one I/O will be required.
Edit: Please check out this answer and the linked blog post to learn about the problems with this pattern and how to make it work safe.
