
If colors have always looked a bit muted — or you’ve struggled with things like matching clothes, reading color-coded charts, or distinguishing similar colors (like purple vs. blue or pink vs. gray) — you’re not alone. Many people live with color vision deficiency and don’t realize how much it impacts everyday life until they try the right tool.
EnChroma® glasses are designed to enhance color separation for some people with red-green color vision deficiency. It’s worth noting: the term “red-green” refers to the cone types involved, not that someone literally can’t see red and green. In day-to-day life, the frustration is usually certain shades that blur together, especially in lower-saturation lighting.
Not a cure. Results vary. Not everyone is a candidate.

EnChroma lenses use specialized filtration to reduce certain wavelength overlap that can make colors look similar for people with red-green color vision deficiency.
EnChroma tends to be most helpful for people with mild to moderate red-green color vision deficiency. If you’re unsure what type you have, we can help you get clarity.
You might be a good fit if:
We keep it simple and practical:
If you already have a prescription, we’ll help coordinate the best way to wear EnChroma (depending on the lens type and your needs).
No. Some people notice a meaningful difference, others notice a subtle change, and some don’t notice much at all.
EnChroma is primarily designed for red-green color vision deficiency. It typically does not help the same way for blue-yellow deficiency.
Not necessarily — and we don’t recommend relying on glasses to meet official occupational requirements. We’ll be honest about expectations.
If you’ve been curious for years, this is a low-pressure way to get real answers.
If you’ve been curious for years, this is a low-pressure way to get real answers.