Arrange your vision eye test today for free with home visit opticians. Arrange Now. Book your free vision test appointment in the comfort of your home. Book Now
- Book Free Appointment
Eye Tests and Eye Care
Glasses and Contact Lenses
- Local Eye Care Specialist
Get local eye care advice
Personalised eye tests
- Book Free Home Eye Test
Book your free home eye test
Local eye care specialists
- Improve MyVision
Book your appointment with a
local-eye care specialist today.
- Home Visit Eye Tests
Get Eyes Tests at Home
Local Eye Care Specialists
- Advice on Eye Care
Get advice on eye care
Personalised eye tests
- Book Free Appointment
Book or Change Your Practical Driving Test with Ease - Let Us Do the Work for You! Get driving test cancellation quickly. Sign up & get a driving test cancellation.
Search results
People also ask
How do drivers test for peripheral vision?
What is the DVLA sight test for driving?
Do I need a visual field test if I have peripheral vision?
Who does the DVLA analyse the results of a visual field test?
Can DVLA arrange a sight test?
How do I book a driver's visual field and acuity test?
Mar 11, 2016 · If DVLA needs a visual field assessment for determining fitness to drive, it: requires the method to be a binocular Esterman field test. may request monocular full field charts in...
Specsavers works with the DVLA to offer drivers visual field and acuity testing. Find out about the specific eyesight rules and what happens in a DVLA eye test.
You must have an uninterrupted horizontal visual field of at least 160 degrees with an extension of at least 70 degrees left and right and 30 degrees up and down. No defects should be present...
DVLA eye test requirements include having a minimum visual acuity of 0.5 (6/12) on the Snellen scale with or without corrective lenses and a horizontal visual field of at least 120 degrees. These standards ensure drivers have the necessary visual acuity and peripheral vision for safe driving.
Field of vision standards. As well as the statutory number plate test, the DVLA recognise that an adequate field of vision is necessary for driving. You must have: good peripheral vision on...
The DVLA may send you for a field of vision test in which lights are flashed in the edge of your vision to make sure you can see them. People are generally very poor at judging their own field of vision, and blind spots in your vision create a risk of accidents, especially involving pedestrians.
This ‘visual requirement’ involves the assessment of both your central vision and your peripheral vision too (corners of your vision). If the DVLA deem it necessary, they will investigate your peripheral vision by asking you to undergo a specialist type of ‘visual field test’.