Eye Conditions
Blurred vision: common causes and when to see a specialist

Blurred vision is the single most common eye complaint I see. Most causes are simple and treatable, but a small number are sight-threatening and need same-day review. This guide walks through the pattern of blur, the likely causes, and what to do next.
Sudden vs gradual
The single most useful question is: did the blur come on **suddenly** (minutes to hours), **quickly** (a few days), or **slowly** (weeks to years)?
Sudden blur in one eye is potentially serious: retinal detachment, vitreous haemorrhage, retinal vein or artery occlusion, wet age-related macular degeneration, optic neuritis or a stroke can all present this way. Attend eye casualty the same day.
Gradual blur in both eyes is almost always a benign, treatable cause: refractive error, cataract, dry eye or presbyopia.
The commonest gradual causes
**Uncorrected refractive error.** By far the commonest cause in UK adults. A change in glasses prescription every 1–2 years is normal from the mid-40s. If your last sight test was more than two years ago, start there.
**Presbyopia.** From around 45 the natural lens loses focusing flexibility, so reading print and phone screens becomes an effort. Correction options range from reading glasses to varifocals to lens replacement surgery.
**Cataract.** Gradual haze, faded colours, glare at night, difficulty reading road signs. Now treatable by day-case cataract surgery with excellent outcomes.
**Dry eye.** Blur that clears with a blink or fluctuates through the day. See our dry eye guide.
**Diabetic eye disease.** Any diabetic with new blur must have a dilated retinal check within days. Blood-sugar swings alone can also cause temporary blur.
**Age-related macular degeneration.** Distortion of straight lines (door frames, window frames) and a central blurred or missing spot. Wet AMD needs urgent intravitreal treatment.
The commonest sudden causes
**Retinal detachment.** Blur preceded by floaters, flashes and a curtain across vision — same-day emergency. Detail in floaters and flashes.
**Vitreous haemorrhage.** Blur, dark cloud or shower of red spots, often in diabetics or after trauma.
**Retinal vein occlusion.** Painless blur in one eye, often on waking, in patients with high blood pressure.
**Optic neuritis.** Blur with pain on eye movement, often in adults under 40 — needs neurology assessment for possible multiple sclerosis.
**Stroke.** Sudden loss of vision on one side, especially with weakness or slurred speech — call 999.
Red flags — same day review
Contact eye casualty or call 111 the same day if blur comes with:
- Sudden onset in one eye
- Flashes, floaters or a shadow across vision
- Eye pain, redness or headache
- Weakness, numbness or slurred speech
- Recent eye surgery or trauma
- Contact lens in a red eye
How the cause is worked out
In a private consultation I would:
- Measure best-corrected acuity
- Perform full refraction
- Examine the anterior segment with a slit lamp
- Perform OCT of the macula and optic nerve
- Dilate to examine the retina
One visit is usually enough to identify the cause and put a plan in place.
Next steps
If your blurred vision has been building for weeks or months, an up-to-date optometry test is the right first step. If it started suddenly, or if an optometrist has spotted a change on OCT, you can book a private consultation or call **020 3137 3237** for a specialist assessment.
Frequently asked questions
- Do I need an eye specialist or an optometrist first?
- For gradual blur, start with an optometry sight test. For sudden blur, flashes, floaters or eye pain, go straight to eye casualty or call 111.
- Can cataract cause blur in both eyes?
- Yes — cataract usually affects both eyes but often at slightly different rates. Once glare or reduced acuity affects daily life, surgery is the definitive treatment.
- Why is my vision blurry in the morning?
- Overnight tear evaporation and mild eyelid inflammation (blepharitis) commonly cause morning blur that clears within minutes of lubricating drops.
- Should I worry if my glasses prescription keeps changing?
- Small changes every 2 years are normal. Rapid or asymmetric change, especially with glare or haze, can be an early sign of cataract and is worth a specialist opinion.
Explore more on Eye Conditions
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