Conversion Resources

Using Charts To Convert Glasses Prescriptions To Contact Lenses

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By Julie Sennett

·6 min read

Converting a glasses prescription to contact lenses ranges from extremely simple to convoluted and time consuming. That's because there are lots of calculations involved. But if the process involves following the same formula every time, why can't the results for every possibility be calculated and made into a chart? Well, they have! And you can access all of them here on Contacts Advice.

Using Charts To Convert Glasses Prescription To Contact Lenses Featured

Glasses to Contacts Conversion Charts

Why Convert Glasses to Contacts?

Glasses to contacts conversion charts are called back vertex charts because they take into account how the distance between the eye and lenses changes the effective power of the lens. That distance is called the vertex distance.

When prescriptions for glasses are measured they are measured with lenses that are held at ~12–13mm from the eye. This distance (vertex distance) is used because that's the typical distance between the eye and the lenses in glasses (when properly fitted).

If your prescription for glasses was measured at 13mm from your eye but you wore your glasses at say, 50mm from your eyes, the prescription would no longer be correct. That's because the vertex distance changes the effective power of the lenses you look through.

Changing the vertex distance changes the effective power of the lenses.

Specifically, increasing the vertex distance adds more positive power to the lenses, and reducing the vertex distance adds more negative power to the lenses.

However, as you well know, contact lenses have no vertex distance. They sit directly on the eyes. This means that going from glasses to contact lenses reduces the vertex distance, which adds more negative power to the lenses. That is why the power has to be adjusted.

Failure to properly account for the change in vertex distance between glasses and contact lenses can cause your prescription to be off. Specifically, if you are nearsighted your contact lenses could be too strong. If you are farsighted your contact lenses may not be strong enough. In both situations this can cause your vision to be blurry as well as place undue strain on your eyes.

Basic Glasses to Contact Lens Conversion Charts

Basic glasses to contact lens conversion charts take a single glasses lens power and show you the converted value for contact lenses. Typically, they show the results for both negative and positive power on either side of the chart.

In charts like these, the middle column is the power that corresponds to the glasses. The columns on either side represent the equivalent power of contact lenses. Generally, for negative powers the result is on the left and for positive powers the result is on the right.

To use the chart:

  1. Identify the right eye's 'Sphere' number on the glasses prescription (note whether it is positive or negative) and find it in the middle column
  2. If the number is negative, the equivalent contact lens power is the number immediately to the left
  3. If the number is positive, the equivalent contact lens power is the number immediately to the right
  4. Repeat this process for the left eye

Example:

Let's go through the steps:

Right Eye
  1. Identify the right eye's 'Sphere' number on the glasses prescription (note whether it is positive or negative) and find it in the middle column → −6.50 (negative)
  2. If the number is negative, the equivalent contact lens power is the number immediately to the left → It is negative so we take the number to the left, −5.62
Left Eye
  1. Identify the left eye's 'Sphere' number on the glasses prescription (note whether it is positive or negative) and find it in the middle column → −5.25 (negative)
  2. If the number is negative, the equivalent contact lens power is the number immediately to the left → It is negative so we take the number to the left, −5.00

Charts like these work quite well when a prescription for glasses only has 1 number on it for each eye, such as in the example above. But what if a prescription for glasses has a 'Sphere' and a 'Cylinder' power?

That's where the usefulness of these charts breaks down. It is still possible to use a basic vertex chart for prescriptions that have a 'Sphere' and 'Cylinder' number but the process becomes quite a bit more complicated.

I have described the entire process in a 4-part tutorial series that you can read here:

However, if you like to keep it simple I have just the thing for you!

Sphere AND Cylinder Glasses to Contacts Conversion Charts

Previously, charts did not exist to convert both the 'Sphere' and 'Cylinder' number at the same time. That is because there are so many different 'Sphere' and 'Cylinder' combinations that it would produce an enormous chart.

However, I found that if you break it down into sections and organize the charts logically, it is possible to do. And I have done just that.

When making Contacts Advice's Sphere and Cylinder Glasses to Contacts Conversion Charts I created a different chart for every possible 'Sphere' value. Each chart shows the conversion for specific combinations of 'Sphere' and 'Cylinder' listed.

For example, for a chart for the 'Sphere' of −5.00 — it shows all the possible combinations of 'Sphere' and 'Cylinder' up to a maximum 'Cylinder' of −3.25.

Now say you were interested in converting the following numbers: −5.00 'Sphere' −2.00 'Cylinder' and −5.00 'Sphere' −3.00 'Cylinder'. You would look up those combinations on the chart, and the corresponding rows would be the converted values.

It's that easy! No power cross diagrams, no messy formulas, no complicated calculations.

Here they all are for your convenience. Feel free to print them for quick reference in your clinic or bookmark this page.

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