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Educational content only
This page is general patient education, not medical advice. It does not diagnose conditions, recommend specific treatments for you, or replace a conversation with your eye care provider. Always consult a qualified clinician before making decisions about your eye health.
Kids often don't know their vision is abnormal — they assume everyone sees what they see. A real eye exam (not just a school screening) catches problems before they affect learning and development.
What's happening
Why pediatric exams are different.
Young children can't reliably describe vision problems. A 3-year-old doesn't know if one eye is blurrier than the other. Kids who've always seen this way assume it's normal.
Pediatric eye exams use special techniques — no reading required — to measure vision, alignment, focus, and eye health. They catch issues like amblyopia (lazy eye) during the narrow window when treatment works.
What helps
Here's the plan — and why it works.
6 months
First exam
Checks eye alignment, focus, and any abnormalities even in pre-verbal babies.
Age 3
Toddler exam
Catches vision differences between eyes. Critical for amblyopia prevention.
Pre-K
School-ready exam
Confirms vision is ready for learning to read. Treats anything we find.
Annual
Once in school
Yearly through school years. Catches myopia onset, accommodation issues, and more.
Watch for these signs
Eye turning (even intermittent), white reflex in photos instead of red, extreme light sensitivity, or a milky appearance in the pupil. Call us for any of these — some indicate conditions that need urgent care.
Common questions
Honest answers to common questions.
When should my child have their first exam?+
Age 6 months, age 3, then before kindergarten, then annually through school years if any risk factors. Earlier if a family history or any concerns.
School screenings — are those enough?+
No. School screenings catch distance vision problems only, and they miss a lot. They don't assess eye alignment, focusing, or eye health. They're a screening, not an exam.
What is amblyopia (lazy eye)?+
When one eye's vision doesn't develop properly, often because of unequal prescriptions between eyes. Treatable before age 7–8; much harder after. This is why early exams matter.
Signs of vision problems in kids?+
Squinting, tilting the head, sitting too close to screens, frequent eye rubbing, poor school performance, trouble with sports, headaches, eye turning. If you notice anything, come in.
Do eye exams hurt?+
Not at all. Dilation drops sting briefly — we warn kids they'll feel "a little cold." Otherwise, it's lights, pictures, and talking. Kids often enjoy it.