
Calculate Your Visual Acuity, Prescription, and Eye Health Assessment
No vision history yet. Calculate your eyesight!

Founder & CEO, Toolraxy
Faiq Ur Rahman is a web designer, digital product developer, and founder of Toolraxy, a growing platform of web-based calculators and utility tools. He specializes in building structured, user-friendly tools focused on health, finance, productivity, and everyday problem-solving.
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The Eyesight Calculator & Vision Analyzer is a comprehensive digital tool designed to estimate key indicators of visual performance. It takes your distance vision measurements (right and left eye), reading distance, age group, and self-reported vision conditions to generate an instant analysis of your visual acuity, reading efficiency, and estimated prescription needs.
This tool is intended for individuals curious about their vision baseline, patients preparing for an eye exam, and students learning about optometry. While it does not replace a professional eye exam, it provides valuable educational insights into how vision is measured and what common acuity scores (like 20/20) actually mean in practice.
Step 1: Enter Distance Vision. Input your distance vision values for the right and left eye. The standard format is “X/20” (e.g., 20/20 or 20/40). Use the number boxes to adjust these values.
Step 2: Set Reading Distance & Age. Enter the distance you typically hold reading material (default 40 cm). Select your age group: Child, Under 40, 40–60, or 60+.
Step 3: Select Conditions. Check any boxes that apply to you, such as nearsightedness (myopia), farsightedness (hyperopia), astigmatism, or presbyopia. Adjust the “Light Sensitivity” slider to match your glare tolerance.
Step 4: Choose Eye Preference. Select whether you want the calculation based on the right eye, left eye, both eyes, or a monovision simulation.
Step 5: Calculate. Click the blue “Calculate” button. Your results will appear immediately, including your Visual Acuity score, estimated diopters, and vision grade.
The Eyesight Calculator uses a logic-based algorithm to convert raw user inputs into standardized vision metrics. It does not perform a physical eye test but simulates expected outcomes based on established optical relationships.
The primary output, Adjusted Vision, is calculated as:
Adjusted Vision = Best Vision × Age Multiplier × Light Sensitivity Factor
Best Vision:Â The smaller (better) value between your right and left eye inputs, or the specific eye selected.
Age Multiplier:Â Based on selected age group (Child: 1.2, Young: 1.1, Middle: 1.0, Senior: 0.9).
Light Factor:Â Based on slider value (Normal = 1.0, Severe = 0.8, etc.).
Visual Efficiency: Calculated as (20 / Adjusted Vision) × 100. This represents your estimated visual percentage compared to a 20/20 baseline.
Diopter Estimate: Roughly calculated as (Vision - 20) × 0.25. Positive values suggest farsightedness; negative values suggest nearsightedness.
Reading Acuity:Â A score out of 100 derived from reading distance, age, and presbyopia status.
Condition Modifiers: If specific conditions (e.g., astigmatism) are checked, the algorithm applies a reduction multiplier (0.8–0.9) to the vision score to simulate the impact of uncorrected refractive error.
Right Eye: 20/40
Left Eye: 20/30
Age: 45 (Selects “40–60”)
Reading Distance: 50 cm
Conditions: Presbyopia checked
Eye Preference: Both Eyes
Best Vision:Â Min(20/40, 20/30) =Â 20/30
Age Multiplier:Â 1.0 (Middle age)
Light Factor:Â Default 1.0
Presbyopia Modifier:Â 0.9
Adjusted Vision: 20/30 × 1.0 × 1.0 × 0.9 = 20/27
Visual Efficiency: (20 ÷ 27) × 100 = 74%
Diopter Estimate: (27 – 20) × 0.25 = +1.75 D (suggesting reading addition)
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Output:Â The user sees “Visual Acuity: 20/27”, “Vision Grade: Good”, and receives a recommendation for reading glasses or progressive lenses.
Visual acuity is the measure of the eye’s ability to distinguish shapes and details at a given distance. The standard notation, such as 20/40, describes what a person with “normal” vision can see at 40 feet versus what the patient can see at 20 feet. This tool focuses heavily on this Snellen fraction format.
The top number (20) represents the test distance in feet. The bottom number represents the distance at which a standard eye can read the same line. Therefore, 20/20 is considered standard; 20/40 means the patient must be at 20 feet to see what a normal eye sees at 40 feet (worse vision), while 20/15 is better than standard.
There is a general relationship between visual acuity and diopters, though it varies per individual. In optometry, a -0.50 D myope might see 20/30, while a -1.00 D myope might see 20/50. This tool uses a simplified linear estimate (0.25 D per line of Snellen). While not clinically precise for all cases, it provides a strong educational correlation for users to understand how “strength of prescription” relates to “blurriness.”
The algorithm accounts for presbyopia—the natural loss of accommodation—by reducing the reading acuity score and suggesting a positive (plus) diopter for near work. By age 45, most adults require +1.00 D to +1.50 D for comfortable reading; by age 60, this can increase to +2.50 D or higher. The tool simulates this by applying a 0.7 multiplier to reading scores when the “Presbyopia” box is checked, combined with age factor reductions.
Preventive eye care is often neglected due to lack of symptoms. Tools like this bridge the gap by translating vague feelings of “eye strain” or “squinting” into measurable terms. By quantifying vision as a score or diopter value, users are more likely to recognize the severity of their symptoms and schedule a comprehensive eye examination.
This tool is strictly educational. It cannot measure contrast sensitivity, depth perception, peripheral vision, or eye coordination (binocular vision). It also cannot detect pathology. For example, a patient with 20/20 acuity may still have glaucoma with significant peripheral vision loss. The “prescription estimate” generated here is a simulation; it does not account for vertex distance, phoropter adjustments, or cylinder axis refinement required for real glasses.
A comprehensive eye exam includes refraction to determine prescription, but also includes a slit-lamp examination of the anterior segment, dilated fundus examination of the retina, and tonometry for eye pressure. Many blinding diseases—such as diabetic retinopathy and glaucoma—are silent in early stages. This tool encourages users to seek professional care but should never be viewed as a diagnostic clearance.
Optometrists often use “habitual acuity” questions to gauge a patient’s current visual state. This tool replicates that initial triage. Patients can bring their printed or saved results to their eye doctor to communicate their perceived changes more effectively. This saves time during the exam and helps the doctor determine whether the change is refractive or pathological.
Instant Baseline:Â Provides an immediate, numerical baseline of your distance and near vision.
Educational Visualization:Â The simulated eye chart and vision scale help users understand Snellen fractions intuitively.
Personalized Recommendations:Â Generates specific eye care tips based on age, occupation (reading habits), and self-reported conditions.
Progress Tracking:Â Allows users to save their history, enabling them to track changes in their estimated vision over months or years.
No Equipment Required:Â Works on any smartphone, tablet, or desktop without specialized hardware.
Risk Awareness:Â Highlights risk factors for conditions like myopia progression in children and age-related macular degeneration in seniors.
IMPORTANT: This Eyesight Calculator and Vision Analyzer is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not a medical device and does not provide a medical diagnosis. The calculations and estimates presented are based on generalized algorithms and user-submitted data, not clinical measurement. Only a licensed optometrist or ophthalmologist can diagnose refractive errors, prescribe corrective lenses, or detect eye diseases. If you are experiencing sudden vision loss, flashes of light, pain, or any change in your vision, seek immediate medical attention. Never adjust or purchase corrective lenses based solely on the output of this tool.
No. This tool provides an estimate based on your inputs. A precise eyeglass prescription requires a phoropter and a comprehensive refraction performed by an optometrist or ophthalmologist.
No. 20/20 is considered standard or normal vision, but it is not perfect. Many individuals can achieve 20/16 or 20/12. 20/20 only indicates clarity at distance, not overall eye health.
Presbyopia is the age-related loss of ability to focus on near objects. Even with good distance vision, presbyopic eyes struggle to maintain focus at close range, which is why the reading efficiency score decreases.
Monovision is a correction strategy where one eye is optimized for distance and the other for near vision, often used with contact lenses. Selecting this option simulates the best acuity from either eye.
A visual efficiency below 80% (worse than 20/25) suggests you may benefit from vision correction. It is a common finding, but you should schedule an eye exam to determine the exact cause.
Yes, you can select the “Child” age group. However, children often have strong accommodation that can mask refractive errors. This tool is not a substitute for pediatric vision screenings or professional exams.
Visual acuity refers to distance vision clarity. Reading acuity refers to near vision function. It is common to have excellent distance vision but require reading glasses after age 40.
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