Low Vision Magnifiers

Magnifiers designed for low vision, macular degeneration, and age-related sight loss. Built to help you stay independent.

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

132 products

Living with low vision does not mean giving up reading, hobbies, or independence. The right magnifier gives you back access to mail, medication, recipes, books, and the small print that defines daily life.

What low vision actually means

Low vision is sight loss that glasses or contacts cannot fully correct. The most common causes are macular degeneration, cataracts, diabetic retinopathy, and glaucoma. Magnifiers do not restore vision, but they enlarge what is left so you can read it.

What makes a good low-vision magnifier

Three things matter most.

  • High-quality optics. Glass or aspheric acrylic with no edge distortion.
  • Bright, even LED lighting. Most low-vision users need 3 to 4 times the ambient light a fully-sighted person uses.
  • The right magnification for your sight loss. Too low will not help, too high reduces field of view too much.

Common low-vision setups

For mild loss, a 3x or 4x LED handheld covers most reading.

For moderate loss, a stand magnifier with 5x to 7x and built-in LED gives hands-free comfort.

For advanced macular degeneration, electronic magnifiers, also called video magnifiers, project the page onto a screen at up to 1000x with adjustable contrast and colour.

Working with your optometrist

If you have been diagnosed with macular degeneration or another condition, your optometrist may have recommended a magnifier strength. Bring their note when you call us. We will match products to what they prescribed.