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Pupillary distance measurement illustration
Eye Education
EyeQue Blog
Updated June 2026
5 min read

Pupillary Distance:
The one number that can make or break your glasses.

Without the correct PD measurement, even a perfect prescription won’t give you clear, comfortable vision. Here’s what pupillary distance is, why it matters more than most people realize, and how to measure it accurately at home.

What is pupillary distance?

Pupillary distance (PD) is the measurement in millimeters between the centers of your pupils. It’s one of the most important — and most overlooked — numbers when ordering eyeglasses.

When an eyeglass lens is manufactured, it’s ground with an optical center — the point that defines the way light bends to correct your vision. For your glasses to work correctly, that optical center needs to line up precisely with your pupil. Pupillary distance tells the manufacturer exactly where to place it.

Get it wrong, and even a perfect prescription will feel off.

54–74mm
Typical adult PD range
±1mm
Can cause noticeable symptoms
2 types
Binocular and monocular PD

Why your PD matters more than you think

Most people obsess over getting their prescription right — and ignore PD entirely. But an incorrect PD is one of the most common reasons people find their glasses uncomfortable, even when the prescription itself is accurate.

When your lenses aren’t centered correctly on your pupils, your eyes have to work harder to compensate. Over time, that extra effort adds up. Common symptoms of an incorrect PD include:

Eye strain — your eyes are constantly working to compensate for misaligned lenses
Headaches — particularly above the eyes or across the forehead after reading or screen use
Blurry or double vision — especially when looking straight ahead or at distance
Nausea or dizziness — common with high prescriptions and even slightly off PD
“Something feels off” — a vague discomfort that’s hard to pinpoint but persistent
High prescriptions are especially sensitive

If your sphere correction is above ±3.00D, even a 1mm error in PD can cause significant prismatic effect — meaning your lenses are bending light incorrectly. The higher your prescription, the more critical an accurate PD becomes.

Binocular vs. monocular PD

There are two ways PD is measured, and understanding the difference matters — especially when ordering progressive lenses or bifocals.

Binocular and monocular pupillary distance illustration
Binocular PD

The total distance

Binocular PD measures the full distance between both pupil centers as a single number. It’s the most common format and works well for single-vision lenses with lower prescriptions.

Best for: single-vision lenses, lower prescriptions
Monocular PD

Per-eye measurement

Monocular PD measures the distance from each pupil center to the center of the nose bridge separately — giving two numbers (e.g. 32.0 / 32.5). This is more precise because most people’s eyes aren’t perfectly centered on their face.

Best for: progressive lenses, bifocals, high prescriptions
Which should you use?

If you’re ordering progressive or bifocal lenses, always use monocular PD. For single-vision lenses with a prescription under ±3.00D, binocular PD is typically sufficient. When in doubt, monocular is always more precise.

How to measure your PD

PD can be measured a few different ways — from a basic DIY ruler method to a dedicated measurement device. Accuracy matters, so it’s worth using the most reliable method available to you.

01
Ask your eye doctor
Most optometrists will measure your PD during a routine eye exam. However, some may charge a fee or not include it automatically. Simply ask — you’re legally entitled to your full prescription including PD in most states.
Most accurate
02
EyeQue PDCheck® — selfie-based measurement at home
PDCheck is a small frame device you wear while taking a selfie through the PDCheck app. The app analyzes the image and returns your binocular and monocular PD within ±1mm — no ruler, no mirror, no guesswork. Available for iOS and Android. PDCheck is $15 on its own, and also comes included with VERAI for those who need a full prescription kit.
Most accurate at home
EyeQue PDCheck frame box
03
EyeQue PDCheck AR® — free iOS app
If you have an iPhone, EyeQue also offers PDCheck AR — a free augmented reality app that uses your phone’s camera to estimate your PD without any physical device. It’s a convenient option for a quick measurement, though the physical PDCheck frame is more accurate for higher prescriptions. Available free on the App Store.
Free — iOS only
04
Ruler and mirror method
Hold a millimeter ruler against your nose, look straight ahead in a mirror, and measure the distance between your pupils. This works in a pinch for lower prescriptions but introduces significant human error — especially for monocular PD. Margin of error can be 2–3mm.
Least accurate
EyeQue PDCheck®

If you need an accurate PD measurement at home, EyeQue makes two options: PDCheck® — a $15 frame device that works with the app for ±1mm accuracy — and PDCheck AR®, a free iOS app that uses augmented reality to estimate your PD without any device. PDCheck is also included with VERAI for anyone getting a full prescription kit.

PD and ordering glasses online

Online eyewear has made glasses significantly more affordable — but it’s also put the responsibility of getting an accurate PD on the buyer. Most online retailers require you to enter your PD when placing an order, and many don’t verify it.

This is where mistakes happen. If you estimate or guess your PD, you may receive glasses that cause the exact symptoms described above — and the retailer may not be able to tell you why.

Before ordering glasses online, make sure you have an accurate PD measurement. If your eye doctor hasn’t provided one, you can measure it at home using PDCheck or ask your doctor to include it on your written prescription — they’re required to provide it in most states.

Your right to your PD

Under the FTC Eyeglass Rule, your eye doctor must give you a copy of your prescription immediately after your exam — at no extra charge. Your PD may not always be included, but you can request it. Some states specifically require it be provided.

Already have your PD? Get a full prescription from home.

PD is one piece of the glasses puzzle. The other piece is your prescription — sphere, cylinder, and axis. If you have your PD but your prescription is out of date, you still can’t order glasses with confidence.

VERAI by EyeQue combines at-home vision measurement with a doctor-reviewed prescription. You measure your vision using the VERAI device, a licensed doctor reviews your results, and — if you’re eligible — you receive a signed prescription valid at any eyewear retailer. Your Try-On glasses are included so you can confirm fit before committing to a full pair.

Complete vision solution

Get a full prescription — not just your PD.

VERAI measures your sphere, cylinder, and axis from home. A licensed doctor reviews your results. If eligible, you receive a signed prescription valid at any eyewear retailer — plus custom Try-On glasses.

See VERAI — $129 →
VERAI complete vision kit bundle

Frequently asked questions

For most adults, PD is stable after the early 20s. Children’s PD changes as they grow. If you measured your PD several years ago as an adult, it’s likely still accurate — but re-measuring is always worth doing when ordering a new pair of glasses, especially if your previous glasses felt uncomfortable.
The average adult binocular PD is approximately 63–65mm for women and 64–66mm for men. The full range for adults is roughly 54–74mm. Your PD is unique to you — using an average is not recommended, as even a few millimeters of error can cause discomfort.
Generally yes — your PD doesn’t change with your prescription. However, for progressive or bifocal lenses, you should always use monocular PD rather than binocular PD, as the per-eye accuracy is more important for multi-focal designs.
Some eye doctors don’t routinely include PD on written prescriptions — often because they measure it only when making glasses in-house. You are entitled to request it. If your doctor charges a separate fee for PD measurement, you can measure it at home using EyeQue PDCheck® as an alternative.
For low prescriptions (under ±2.00D), a margin of ±1–2mm is usually acceptable. For higher prescriptions, progressive lenses, or anyone sensitive to visual discomfort, accuracy within 0.5mm matters. The higher your prescription, the more precise your PD needs to be.
Yes — this is more common than most people realize. If your glasses cause eye strain, headaches, or a vague sense that something is wrong — and your prescription hasn’t changed — an incorrect PD is often the culprit. Re-measure your PD accurately and compare it to what was used to make your current glasses.
EyeQue PDCheck® + VERAI

Your PD. Your prescription.
Both from home.

PDCheck gives you an accurate PD measurement in minutes. VERAI gives you a doctor-reviewed prescription. Together they give you everything you need to order glasses online with total confidence.

 Accurate PD via PDCheck
 Doctor-reviewed prescription*
 Custom Try-On glasses
 Free US shipping
See VERAI — $129 →
*Prescription subject to eligibility. Availability varies by state.


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