Blue-Light Lenses: An Honest Guide
Blue-light lenses are the most over-sold product in eyewear, so here's the straight version from our specialist team.
What blue light is
Blue light is simply the high-energy end of visible light. The sun is by far your biggest source — screens emit a small fraction of what a bright day does. A blue-light filter (ours is built into the GOLD coating and above) reflects or absorbs a slice of that light before it reaches your eye.
What the evidence actually says
Being honest: good-quality studies have not shown that blue-light filters prevent eye damage or cure digital eye strain — most “screen fatigue” comes from reduced blinking and long focus at a fixed distance, not blue light itself. Anyone promising a blue-light lens will fix headaches is over-claiming.
So why do people love them?
Three real, defensible benefits. Comfort: many heavy screen users report screens feel “softer” and less harsh with a filter — subjective, but consistently reported. Evenings: blue light in the evening can suppress melatonin and push your body clock later, so a filter may help if you work or game late and struggle to wind down. No downside: a modern filter is nearly invisible, with just a faint residual reflection — you give up nothing to have it.
Our recommendation
Don't buy a blue-light filter to fix a medical problem — if your eyes regularly ache or your vision blurs at screens, get your eyes examined and your prescription checked first (an out-of-date prescription is the usual culprit). But if you spend your working life on screens and want the most comfortable lens for modern life, the GOLD coating — scratch resistance, anti-reflection, water and smudge repellence, UV protection and the blue-light filter in one — is the upgrade our specialists recommend most, and the 20-20-20 habit (every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds) is free and works.