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How Often Should You Get an Eye Exam at Every Age?

Most people schedule a dental cleaning every six months without thinking twice. However, when it comes to eye exams? Those tend to happen whenever something feels wrong, or when a glasses prescription runs out. The problem with that approach is that many serious eye conditions develop slowly and silently, with no pain or obvious warning signs. By the time you notice something is off, damage may already be done.
The truth is, how often you should get an eye exam depends. It changes throughout your life, and knowing the right schedule for your age could mean the difference between catching a problem early and managing it when it’s much harder to treat.

Eye Exams for Children

Many parents assume their child’s school vision screening is enough. It isn’t. School screenings only check basic visual acuity, meaning how clearly a child can read a chart from across the room. They miss conditions like amblyopia (commonly called “lazy eye”), which occurs when one eye fails to develop normal visual function during childhood. If amblyopia isn’t caught and treated before age 7 or 8, the window for effective correction closes permanently.
At 纽约综合专科 - 眼科, we see patients as young as 7, and for good reason. Children’s eyes are still developing, and that development needs to be monitored.

Recommended eye exam frequency for children and teens:

  • Age 6-12: Every one to two years, or more often if a prescription is already in place
  • Ages 13-17: Annually, especially as screen time and academic demands increase and myopia (nearsightedness) tends to progress quickly during these years
Myopia progression in children isn’t just about needing stronger glasses each year. High myopia, defined as a refractive error greater than -6.00 diopters, significantly increases lifetime risk for conditions like retinal detachment and glaucoma. Catching and managing myopia early protects your child’s vision for decades to come.

Eye Exams in Your 20s and 30s: Don't Skip Just Because Your Vision Seems Fine

Feeling like your eyes are working perfectly is not the same as your eyes being healthy. In your 20s and 30s, eye disease often has no symptoms at all.

Glaucoma, for example, is sometimes called the “silent thief of sight” because it causes gradual damage to the optic nerve, the cable that connects your eye to your brain, with no pain and no obvious vision loss until the damage is advanced. By the time a person notices something is wrong, a significant portion of their peripheral vision may already be gone, and that vision cannot be recovered.

For healthy adults in their 20s and 30s with no risk factors, a comprehensive eye exam every two years is the baseline recommendation. But if any of the following apply to you, annual exams are a smarter approach:

  • You have a family history of glaucoma, macular degeneration, or diabetic eye disease
  • You wear contact lenses
  • You have diabetes, hypertension (high blood pressure), or autoimmune conditions
  • You work in front of screens for long hours

Your 40s: The Decade Your Eyes Change Most

Around age 40, something predictable happens to nearly everyone: reading a restaurant menu or your phone screen starts to require a little more light, a little more distance, a little more effort. This is presbyopia, an age-related hardening of the crystalline lens inside the eye that reduces its ability to flex and focus on nearby objects. It’s not a disease. It’s biology. But it signals that your eyes are entering a new phase and that annual monitoring matters more than ever.

This is also the decade when early signs of conditions like age-related macular degeneration (AMD), a disease that affects the central part of the retina responsible for sharp, detailed vision, can first appear on a dilated fundus examination. AMD has no cure, but early detection allows for treatment strategies that significantly slow its progression.

Annual comprehensive eye exams in your 40s aren’t optional. They’re preventive.

60 and Beyond: When the Stakes Are Highest

After 60, the risk of serious eye disease rises sharply. Cataracts, a clouding of the eye’s natural lens, affect most people to some degree by their mid-60s, glaucoma risk increases, and AMD becomes one of the leading causes of vision loss in older adults.

The good news is that modern ophthalmology has highly effective treatments for all of these conditions when they’re caught in time. Laser cataract surgery can restore crystal-clear vision. Minimally invasive glaucoma surgeries (MIGS) can lower eye pressure without the recovery burden of traditional procedures. Anti-VEGF injections can halt the progression of wet AMD.

None of those treatments can help if a condition goes undetected. For adults 60 and older, annual comprehensive eye exams are essential, and your ophthalmologist may recommend more frequent visits depending on your personal health history.

When Should You See an Eye Doctor Sooner, Regardless of Age?

Exam schedules are a guide, not a ceiling. Some symptoms always warrant prompt attention:
  • Sudden appearance of new floaters or flashes of light (these can signal a retinal tear or detachment, a medical emergency)
  • Sudden blurry vision or loss of vision in one or both eyes
  • Eye pain, redness, or discharge that doesn’t resolve within a day or two
  • Double vision
If you experience any of these, don’t wait for your next scheduled appointment.

Ready to Schedule an Eye Exam? NY Partners Ophthalmology Is Here for Every Stage

Whether you’re bringing in a child for their first comprehensive exam, navigating presbyopia in your 40s, or managing a chronic eye condition later in life, the team at NY Partners Ophthalmology in Flushing, Queens, and Sunset Park, Brooklyn, is here to help. Our providers speak Spanish, Mandarin, Korean, Cantonese, and Fuzhounese, and we accept most major insurance plans.

Your eyes are worth protecting at every age. Request an appointment today and let us build a care plan that fits where you are right now.