7 Signs You Need New Glasses (That Have Nothing to Do with Blurry Vision)

An ophthalmologist reveals the eye symptoms, including achy eyes, headaches, and feeling nauseous, that suggest you need new glasses.

Signs you need new glasses

Your vision can change over a period of time. Your TV, computer, or signs may appear fuzzy or nondescript, even when you’re wearing glasses. So, how do you know when it’s time for a new pair?

Your eyes work as a lens, adjusting their focus for objects at different distances away, whether it’s the computer a few feet from your face or the road far off in the distance, says Reena Garg, MD, who specializes in the medical, laser, and surgical treatment of glaucoma and cataract at the Washington Eye Institute in Riverdale, Maryland and is the associate program director for the ophthalmology residency program at Washington Hospital Center/Georgetown University.

Read on to learn the seven signs that suggest you need new glasses that have nothing to do with blurry vision. (Here are the signs you need to see an eye doctor.)

iStokc/seb_ra

Your eyes are aching

“If you’re compensating not just for distance but because the glasses lens is wrong, that muscle works a little harder,” says Dr. Garg. With your eyes working overtime, your eyes might feel achy, tired, watery, or dry. Watch out for these other ways you strain your eyes without knowing it.

iStock/g-stockstudio

You’re getting headaches

All that eyestrain can be a headache—literally. While your eyes are working harder than they should, you might start feeling a dull ache right around your eyes, especially after reading a book, staring at a computer, or looking at a blackboard. “When you’re focused on these objects, that muscle is working extra hard, and when your prescription is wrong, it’s working even harder,” says Dr. Garg. Every now and then, take 15 to 30 seconds to focus on something else in the distance to give your eyes a break, she says. (Try these stretches for medication-free headache relief.)

iStock/LorenzoPatoia

You keep squinting

Shutting your eyelids a bit lets in less light, which helps you get a clearer picture when your vision isn’t right. Squinting could help compensate for a slightly off prescription, but if you let it go too long as your sight gets worse, you could end up with headaches. “Initially it’s probably more of a subconscious thing, but as the prescription is less right and more wrong and [people are] squinting more, it’s taxing on the eye,” says Dr. Garg. (Check out these vision boosters that don’t have to do with carrots.)

iStock/sergio_kumer

You never go anywhere without sunglasses

“Bright, harsh lights can be really taxing to the eye, especially if you don’t have the right prescription,” says Dr. Garg. You might find that you need to pull your shades out more than usual or turn down the brightness of your TV to keep your eyes from getting overworked. (Related: These are weird ways the sun affects your body.)

iStock/LuminaStock

You’ve been adjusting your computer

Messing with your computer so you can see the screen better? The problem might be your eyes, not your setup. “A lot of times patients say they have to sit farther back from the computer screen to see better or put a few books under the computer and things like that,” says Dr. Garg. Take those little adjustments as a sign to head to the eye doctor. (Here are some some things that can help you figure out if you need reading glasses.)

iStock/thodonal

You’re feeling nauseous

Both your eyes create two images, which your brain weaves together to create the seamless picture. But if one eye has fuzzier vision than the other, the wonky image could make you feel sick. “If one eye has a stronger prescription than the other eye, all of a sudden your brain is seeing two separate images,” says Dr. Garg. “It’s hard for the brain to resolve to put those images together.” In response, you could start feeling vertigo, nausea, or double vision, she says.

iStock/Makidotvn

It’s been more than a year since your last eye exam

“Once a year is about the amount of time to take your prescription to change if it’s going to,” says Dr. Garg. Eventually your prescription will become more stable and you can wait two or three years between checkups, but she recommends most people get an eye exam once a year, unless your doctor asks you to come in sooner. (Related: Here’s what eye experts won’t tell you about glasses.)

Sources
  • Reena Garg, MD, ophthalmologist, Washington Eye Institute, Riverdale, Maryland, and associate program director for the ophthalmology residency program at Washington Hospital Center/Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.
Medically reviewed by Mark Scroggs, MD, on August 13, 2020

Marissa Laliberte
Marissa Laliberte-Simonian is a London-based associate editor with the global promotions team at WebMD’s Medscape.com and was previously a staff writer for Reader's Digest. Her work has also appeared in Business Insider, Parents magazine, CreakyJoints, and the Baltimore Sun. You can find her on Instagram @marissasimonian.