Refraction Tests and 20/20 Vision


What Your Results Really Mean

What Is a Refraction Test?

A refraction test is one of the most important parts of a comprehensive eye exam. It tells your eye doctor whether you need glasses or contacts and exactly what prescription you need for clear vision.

Here’s how it works:

  • You look through a phoropter (that big lens-switching machine).
  • Your doctor asks questions like “Which is clearer: 1 or 2?” to fine-tune your lens power.
  • Machines may also provide an automatic measurement of your focusing ability.
  • The final result is your lens prescription — written in diopters — showing corrections for nearsightedness, farsightedness, astigmatism, or presbyopia.

Without a refraction test, your doctor can’t prescribe the lenses needed to give you your sharpest possible vision.

What Do All Those Numbers Mean?

Your glasses prescription might look something like this:

SPH: –2.50
CYL: –1.00
AXIS: 180

Each number tells part of the story:

  • Sphere (SPH): Corrects nearsightedness (–) or farsightedness (+)
  • Cylinder (CYL) and Axis: Correct astigmatism (irregular eye shape)
  • ADD: Extra magnification for reading (common after age 40)

This formula helps opticians craft lenses that bring your vision as close to perfect focus as possible.

What Is 20/20 Vision, Really?

You’ve probably heard the phrase “20/20 vision.” But what does it actually mean?

20/20 is a measure of visual acuity, or how clearly you can see at a distance:

  • 20/20 means you can see at 20 feet what most people with “normal” vision can see at 20 feet.
  • 20/15 means your eyesight is sharper than average.
  • 20/40 means your vision is weaker, and you must be 20 feet away to see what a person with normal vision can see from 40 feet.

Most state driver’s license requirements are based on achieving at least 20/40 vision with or without correction.

But here’s the catch: 20/20 doesn’t mean perfect vision.

You might still have:

  • Trouble with near vision (like reading small print)
  • Color vision issues
  • Eye teaming or depth perception problems
  • An underlying eye disease, like glaucoma or macular degeneration

That’s why the refraction test is just one part of a full exam.

The Limits of 20/20 Vision

Even if your test results show 20/20 with glasses, it doesn’t guarantee your eyes are healthy. Many serious eye conditions affect your vision in ways not detected by an eye chart:

  • Glaucoma often reduces peripheral vision first.
  • Diabetic eye disease can cause subtle damage before any symptoms show.
  • Cataracts or macular degeneration may affect how you see in real-world settings, like low light or glare, even if you score well in the exam room.

Only a comprehensive eye exam that includes dilation, imaging, and pressure testing can detect these hidden issues.

Why 20/20 Can Still Look Blurry: Optical Aberrations

Even if you read the 20/20 line, your vision might not feel “high‑definition.” One reason is optical aberrations, which are tiny imperfections in the way your eye focuses light. Unlike nearsightedness, farsightedness, or regular astigmatism (which a refraction test measures and glasses correct), some aberrations—often called higher‑order aberrations—aren’t fully fixed by a standard prescription.

What they feel like

  • Glare and halos or starbursts around lights (especially at night)
  • Ghosting or a faint double image
  • Good eye‑chart results but poor contrast or “not quite crisp” detail

Common causes

  • Changes to corneal shape after LASIK & other refractive surgery
  • Lens changes or cataract surgery (and different intraocular lenses (IOLs))
  • Irregular corneas (e.g., keratoconus)
  • Tear film instability (dry eye) that makes the eye’s surface uneven

How your doctor evaluates this

  • Additional testing can map optical quality (e.g., wavefront/aberrometry) and corneal shape (topography/tomography).
  • A careful check of the ocular surface (dry eye) and lens clarity.

What can help

  • An optimized or updated prescription; anti reflective lens coatings to reduce glare
  • Treating dry eye to smooth the eye’s surface
  • Specialty contact lenses (e.g., scleral/RGP) that create a smooth optical surface
  • In select post-surgical situations, your doctor may discuss additional options tailored to your findings

Post‑LASIK note: Aberrations can be more noticeable in low light when pupils are larger. If night driving feels harder—even with 20/20—bring it up at your next exam.

Real-World Care Example: Complete Eye Care of Medina

At Complete Eye Care of Medina, refraction testing is a standard part of every comprehensive exam. But they go beyond just giving you a prescription — their team helps you understand what 20/20 vision means in real life, how your results connect to your overall health, and what steps to take next.

Their Enhanced 20/20 Club membership includes:

  • Annual refraction and complete eye exam
  • Disease screening and digital imaging
  • $100 toward glasses or dry eye services

This bundle ensures you’re not only seeing clearly but also staying ahead of preventable vision loss.

Bottom Line

The refraction test is how your doctor finds out if you need corrective lenses — and how strong they need to be. It also plays a key role in understanding your 20/20 vision status, but remember: Seeing clearly doesn’t always mean your eyes are healthy.

Only a complete eye exam can uncover the whole picture. Knowing what your results mean empowers you to protect your long-term vision.

Schedule your eye exam today!

https://schedule.solutionreach.com/scheduling/subscriber/4557/scheduler