Head Mounted Magnifiers

Head-mounted magnifiers worn like a visor. Both hands free, light where you look, lenses you can swap.

How magnification works

Up to 3x, Large print, newspapers, books · 4x to 10x, Standard reading, labels, maps · 12x to 30x, Fine print, low vision, hobbies · 40x and above, Jewellery, electronics, inspection

4 products

A head-mounted magnifier straps on like a visor and puts the lens in front of your eyes, leaving both hands completely free. The magnification points wherever you look, and most include a built-in LED, so the light follows your gaze. For hobby and repair work, it is the most practical magnifier there is.

How head-mounted magnifiers work

An adjustable headband holds a lens panel in front of the eyes. The panel flips down to use and up when you do not need it. Most accept interchangeable lens plates of different powers, and many have a small LED above the lens that lights exactly what you are looking at.

Interchangeable lenses

The big advantage is swappable lenses. A typical set runs from around 1x to 6x, often with a clip-in loupe for extra power on one eye. You change the lens to suit the task, low power for a wide view, higher power for fine detail, without changing magnifiers.

What they are used for

  • Model building, miniature painting, and crafts.
  • Jewellery making and watch repair.
  • Electronics, soldering, and PCB work.
  • Embroidery, beading, and needlework.

Depth perception and comfort

Because both eyes look through the lens, head-mounted magnifiers keep depth perception, which matters when your hands are working under the lens. A padded, adjustable headband spreads the weight so it stays comfortable over a long session.

Choosing a head-mounted magnifier

Look for a model with multiple interchangeable lenses, a built-in LED, and a comfortable adjustable band. If you wear glasses, check it fits over them. Pick the lens range that matches your work, with higher powers available for fine detail.