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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.
Around age 40–45, reading starts getting harder. The menu goes fuzzy, you hold your phone farther away. It's not a disease — it's physics, and it happens to everyone.
What's happening
Your focusing muscle stiffens.
Inside your eye, a flexible lens changes shape to focus on near objects — like a camera autofocus. With age, this lens stiffens and the muscles that flex it weaken, so near focus becomes harder.
It starts around 40, progresses until your mid-60s, then stabilizes. This is completely normal — everyone gets it, even people who've never needed glasses before.
What helps
Here's the plan — and why it works.
Simple
Reading glasses
Pharmacy readers or custom prescription. Effective, cheap, easy to lose.
Seamless
Progressive lenses
Distance, intermediate, and reading all in one lens with no visible line.
Glasses-free
Multifocal contacts
Several types — soft, rigid, mono-vision. Contacts make it work without readers.
Surgical
Refractive options
Monovision LASIK, or lens replacement with a multifocal implant for long-term freedom.
Not everything blurry is presbyopia
If near vision changes suddenly, if distance vision is also affected, or if you see new floaters, flashes, or shadows — call us. These can signal other issues we want to catch.
Common questions
Honest answers to common questions.
Will my reading glasses get stronger every year?+
Yes, for a while. Strength typically increases until your mid-60s, then plateaus. Expect a small bump every 2–3 years.
Are cheap drugstore readers okay?+
For occasional use, sure. But if you need them many hours daily, custom lenses fit better and have proper optical centers — drugstore readers can cause eye strain if your eyes aren't symmetrical.
What about multifocal contacts?+
Great option if you want to stay glasses-free. They have near and far prescriptions in the same lens. Takes a couple weeks to adapt, but most people love them.
Is there surgery for this?+
Yes — several options. Monovision LASIK sets one eye for distance, one for near. Refractive lens exchange replaces your natural lens with a multifocal implant. We'll discuss whether you're a candidate.
Will my vision ever be "normal" again without help?+
Without treatment, no — the lens change is permanent. But with the right glasses, contacts, or surgery, you can see at all distances very comfortably.