Prescription Reading

Can You Use a Contact Lens Prescription to Buy Glasses? What You Need to Know

The short answer: No. Here is why they are different and what to do instead.

Published June 26, 2026 · 10 min read
Quick Answer: You cannot use a contact lens prescription to buy eyeglasses. These are two separate prescriptions with different measurements. Contact lens prescriptions include base curve (BC) and diameter (DIA) measurements not found on glasses prescriptions, and the sphere (SPH) values differ due to vertex distance. To buy glasses, you need a valid eyeglass prescription from an eye doctor.
Skip the details — here's what to do
  • Contact lens prescriptions and glasses prescriptions are NOT interchangeable — they have different values and requirements
  • Ask your eye doctor for both prescriptions during your exam, or specifically request an eyeglass prescription
  • Do not try to manually convert your contact lens SPH to glasses SPH — it is inaccurate and risks blurry vision or eye strain
  • If you only have a contact lens prescription, schedule a brief refraction test to get a glasses prescription
  • Both prescriptions typically expire after 1-2 years

Why Contact Lens and Glasses Prescriptions Are Different

Many people assume that if they can see clearly with contact lenses, the same prescription should work for glasses. This is a common misconception that can lead to uncomfortable or ineffective eyewear.

The fundamental difference comes down to one key factor: where the corrective lens sits relative to your eye.

Factor Contact Lenses Eyeglasses
Distance from eye Sits directly on the cornea Sits about 12mm in front of the eye
Base curve (BC) Required — matches eye curvature Not needed
Diameter (DIA) Required — lens size on eye Not needed
Sphere (SPH) values Lower power needed Higher power needed
Brand specification Brand-specific (curves vary) Not brand-specific
Prescription validity Usually 1 year or less Usually 1-2 years

This is called the vertex distance — the space between the back surface of your lens and the front of your eye. Because this distance is zero for contacts and approximately 12mm for glasses, the optical power must be adjusted accordingly.

The Vertex Distance Problem: Why SPH Values Differ

Light bends differently depending on how far the corrective lens is from your eye. When a lens sits closer to your eye (as with contacts), it requires less optical power to achieve the same correction. When it sits farther away (as with glasses), it requires more power.

This is especially significant for people with moderate to high prescriptions:

Prescription Strength Typical SPH Difference Why it matters
Low (< ±3.00) Negligible (< 0.25D) Usually interchangeable without noticeable difference
Moderate (±3.00 to ±6.00) 0.25 to 0.50D May cause mild blur or eye strain
High (±6.00 to ±10.00) 0.50 to 1.00D Noticeable blur, headaches, nausea possible
Very High (> ±10.00) More than 1.00D Significantly different vision, unwearable if swapped

The formula for vertex distance conversion is:

Glasses SPH = Contact SPH ÷ (1 - 0.012 × Contact SPH)

For example, a contact lens SPH of -5.00 would need approximately -5.25 in glasses. A contact lens SPH of -10.00 would need approximately -11.50 in glasses. This is why you cannot simply copy the numbers.

What Contact Lens Prescriptions Include (That Glasses Do Not)

Your contact lens prescription contains specific measurements that are essential for safe contact lens wear but are completely irrelevant for glasses:

Base Curve (BC)

Base curve measures the curvature of the back surface of the contact lens, measured in millimeters (typically 8.0 to 9.5mm). It must match the curvature of your cornea for proper fit, comfort, and oxygen transmission. A lens that is too flat or too steep can cause discomfort, corneal abrasions, or reduced oxygen flow to the eye.

Base Curve Cornea Curvature Match Typical Use
8.0 - 8.3mm Very steep cornea Keratoconus, steep corneas
8.4 - 8.6mm Average cornea Most wearers
8.7 - 9.0mm Flat cornea Wider cornea, some astigmatism

Diameter (DIA)

Diameter measures the total width of the contact lens across its center, typically ranging from 13.5 to 15.0mm. It determines how much of the cornea the lens covers and affects lens movement and centration on the eye.

Brand Specification

Contact lens prescriptions are brand-specific. Each brand has different materials, water content, oxygen permeability, and base curve options. Your eye doctor prescribes a specific brand based on your eye health, tear film, and lifestyle needs. Even if two brands have identical SPH and BC values, they may fit and perform differently.

Astigmatism: The Conversion Problem

If your contact lens prescription corrects astigmatism, the problem becomes even more complex. Contact lenses for astigmatism (toric lenses) have additional parameters that do not exist in glasses prescriptions.

Contact lens astigmatism correction includes:

  • Cylinder (CYL) — the amount of astigmatism correction (like glasses)
  • Axis** — the orientation of the correction (like glasses)
  • Orientation marks** — ballast or stabilization design unique to contacts

More importantly, soft toric contact lenses can only correct low to moderate amounts of astigmatism. If your glasses prescription has high astigmatism, your contact lens prescription may only partially correct it — and the remaining astigmatism would need to be addressed differently.

Bottom line: There is no accurate way to convert astigmatism correction from contacts to glasses or vice versa. You need separate prescriptions for each.

The Legal Side: Why Retailers Cannot Accept Contact Prescriptions for Glasses

In the United States, the Fairness to Contact Lens Consumers Act and state regulations govern how eyeglass and contact lens prescriptions work:

Requirement Eyeglasses Contact Lenses
Valid prescription required Yes, to order Yes, to order
Prescriber must provide copy Yes, upon request Yes, automatically
Can a retailer verify prescription Yes Yes
Can you use one for the other No No
Brand/material specified No Yes, required

Online glasses retailers are legally required to verify your prescription before fulfilling an order. They will reject a contact lens prescription because it does not contain the required measurements for glasses. This is not a store policy — it is a regulatory requirement.

What to Do If You Only Have a Contact Lens Prescription

If you want to buy glasses but only have a contact lens prescription, you have several options:

Option 1: Ask Your Eye Doctor for a Glasses Prescription

During your next eye exam, simply ask your eye doctor to provide both a contact lens prescription and an eyeglass prescription. Most eye doctors will automatically give you both if you request them. The refraction (the "which is better, 1 or 2" test) is the same for both — the difference is only in the final prescription values written down.

Option 2: Request a Spectacle Prescription Only Visit

Some eye care practices offer a brief "spectacle-only" refraction test that takes less time than a full eye exam. This is useful if you recently had a contact lens exam but need glasses for occasional use. The fee is typically lower than a full exam.

Option 3: Get Your Glasses Prescription from a Previous Exam

If you have had a glasses prescription in the past, check its expiration date. Many states allow prescriptions up to 2 years old for glasses (compared to 1 year for contacts). If your glasses prescription has not expired, you can use it directly.

Option 4: Request Prescription Release from Your Eye Doctor

In the US, the Ophthalmic Practice Rules in most states require eye doctors to provide patients with a copy of their eyeglass prescription upon request, without requiring you to purchase glasses from them. Call your eye doctor's office and ask them to provide or email your spectacle prescription.

Can You Reverse It? Use Glasses Prescription for Contacts?

The reverse is also true: you cannot use your glasses prescription to buy contact lenses. While some retailers may allow you to bypass prescription verification, this is:

  1. Illegal in the US under the Contact Lens Rule
  2. Dangerous to your eye health
  3. Unlikely to result in correct vision because contacts require BC and DIA measurements

You need a valid, current contact lens prescription — including brand specification — to legally purchase contact lenses. Your eye doctor must conduct a separate contact lens fitting and evaluation before prescribing contacts.

How Long Are These Prescriptions Valid?

Prescription validity periods vary by state and by type:

Prescription Type Typical Validity Factors That May Shorten
Eyeglass prescription 1-2 years Medical conditions, high prescription changes
Contact lens prescription 1 year (some states: 2 years) Brand change, fit issues, eye health concerns

State laws vary significantly:

State Contact Lens Rx Validity Eyeglass Rx Validity
California 1 year 2 years
New York 1 year 2 years (1 year for under 18)
Texas 1 year 2 years
Florida 1 year 2 years (1 year for under 18)
Illinois 1 year 2 years

Note: These are general guidelines. Your actual prescription validity may differ based on your specific eye health and your eye doctor's recommendations.

The Bottom Line

Contact lens prescriptions and eyeglass prescriptions are fundamentally different documents designed for different products. The vertex distance alone means the SPH values must be different, and the additional BC and DIA measurements required for contacts simply do not exist on glasses prescriptions.

To get glasses: Ask your eye doctor for a separate eyeglass prescription, or check if your previous glasses prescription is still valid.

To get contacts: You must have a valid, current contact lens prescription that includes brand, BC, and DIA specifications.

Both prescriptions can typically be obtained during the same comprehensive eye exam. Simply tell your eye doctor you want both.

Quick Reference: Key Differences Summary

Measurement Contact Lens Rx Eyeglass Rx Same or Different?
Sphere (SPH) Yes Yes Different (adjusted for vertex)
Cylinder (CYL) Yes (if astigmatism) Yes (if astigmatism) Different (may be incomplete in contacts)
Axis Yes (if astigmatism) Yes (if astigmatism) Different (may be incomplete in contacts)
ADD No Yes (if multifocal) N/A for contacts
Base Curve (BC) Yes No Only on contacts
Diameter (DIA) Yes No Only on contacts
Brand Yes (required) No Only on contacts
Material Yes (required) No Only on contacts

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Contact lens prescriptions and eyeglass prescriptions contain different measurements and values. Contact lens prescriptions include base curve (BC) and diameter (DIA), which are not needed for glasses. The sphere (SPH) values also differ because contact lenses sit directly on the eye while glasses sit about 12mm away. You need a separate eyeglass prescription to buy glasses.
Contact lens prescriptions differ from glasses prescriptions because contact lenses sit directly on the cornea (about 9-10mm from the eye surface), while glasses sit about 12mm away. This distance difference means the optical power must be adjusted. Additionally, contacts require base curve and diameter measurements to ensure proper fit on the eye.
While an approximate conversion formula exists (glasses SPH = contact lens SPH x 1.025), this is not accurate enough for ordering prescription glasses. The vertex distance adjustment varies by prescription strength, and astigmatism corrections cannot be converted at all. The only reliable method is to ask your eye doctor for a separate glasses prescription, or schedule an eye exam that includes both.
No. You need a separate contact lens prescription to buy contacts. In the US, it is illegal to dispense contact lenses without a valid prescription, even if you have a glasses prescription. Contact lens prescriptions include additional measurements like base curve and diameter that are not part of glasses prescriptions.
Both eyeglass and contact lens prescriptions are typically valid for one to two years, depending on your state laws. However, contact lens prescriptions often expire faster than glasses prescriptions because eye doctors want to monitor eye health more closely. Some states require contact lens prescriptions to be renewed annually.

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