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What Does 20/20 Vision Actually Mean?

20/20 vision means normal sharpness at 20 feet — not perfect sight. Learn what the Snellen fraction tells you, what 20/40 and 20/200 mean in real life, and what acuity misses entirely.

Maya Lindqvist · Senior Health WriterMedically reviewed by Dr. Priya Anand, ODPublished June 4, 2026 · 8 min read

You've almost certainly heard the phrase "20/20 vision." Most people assume it means perfect eyesight. It doesn't. It means normal eyesight — the level at which a typical eye reads a standard chart from 20 feet away.

That distinction matters, because some people see considerably better than 20/20, and the fraction itself only tells you one narrow thing about how well you see.

What the fraction actually says

Hermann Snellen, a Dutch ophthalmologist, introduced his standardised letter chart in 1862. The fractions it produces follow a consistent logic.

The top number is always the test distance — 20 feet (or 6 metres in metric countries, giving the equivalent "6/6" notation). That number never changes.

The bottom number is the distance at which a person with statistically normal vision could read the same line. So:

  • 20/20 — you see at 20 feet what a normal eye sees at 20 feet. This is the baseline, not a gold standard.
  • 20/15 — you see at 20 feet what a normal eye needs to be only 15 feet away to see. Your acuity is sharper than average.
  • 20/40 — you need to be 20 feet from something a normal eye reads clearly at 40 feet. Your detail vision is reduced.
  • 20/200 — you need to stand 20 feet from an object a normal eye can resolve from 200 feet away.
You(20 ft)Normal eyereads here20 / 40 → bottom number = 40 ft20 ft40 ft← same letter size →
The bottom number is the key variable — it tells you how far away a normal eye could read the same letter you're reading from 20 feet.

Key takeaways

  • 20/20 means normal acuity — roughly one-third of adults achieve it naturally without correction.
  • Some people see 20/15 or even 20/10: genuinely sharper than the population norm.
  • 20/40 is the most common US minimum to drive unrestricted; 20/200 is the legal blindness threshold.
  • The Snellen fraction measures distance sharpness only — contrast, colour vision, and peripheral vision require separate tests.

Try the test now

The visual acuity test below replicates the core logic of the Snellen chart on-screen. It is a useful educational self-check, not a clinical exam — lighting, screen resolution, and viewing distance all affect your result. Still, it will give you a working estimate to bring to this article's explanations.

Try it nowFree · runs right here · ~4 min

The acuity scale: what each fraction means in daily life

AcuityWhat it meansPractical impact
20/10Twice the normal sharpnessRare; sometimes seen in young adults with excellent optics
20/15Sharper than normalFine detail is easier; reading small print from a distance
20/20Normal (reference standard)Benchmark for everyday tasks; most glasses/contacts aim here
20/40Mildly reducedMinimum for unrestricted driving in most US states
20/70Moderately reducedMany states restrict or deny driving; difficulty reading small print
20/100Significantly reducedLarge-print materials helpful; some states deny a licence
20/200Severe loss (better eye)US legal blindness threshold; qualifies for disability benefits
Visual acuity fractions and their practical significance (US context)

Better than 20/20 is real

"Perfect" is a common but inaccurate way to describe 20/20. The standard was set to represent the statistical average of a healthy population — not the best any human eye can achieve.

Many young adults with healthy corneas can read the 20/15 line, and a small number reach 20/10. Raptors, famously, achieve what would be described as 20/2 in human terms. The Snellen standard was never meant as a ceiling.

Myth

20/20 vision means perfect eyesight.

What acuity misses

The Snellen chart was designed to measure one specific thing: how small a high-contrast black letter on a white background can be, at a fixed distance, for you to identify it. Useful, but incomplete.

Vision has several other dimensions that matter enormously in daily life:

What the Snellen chart doesn't test

  1. Contrast sensitivityThe ability to distinguish objects from backgrounds in low contrast — think driving in fog, or reading grey text on white paper. You can have 20/20 acuity and poor contrast sensitivity.
  2. Colour visionAbout 8% of men and 0.5% of women have some form of colour vision deficiency. The Snellen chart uses black letters; colour is never tested by it.
  3. Peripheral visionVisual field — how wide your usable vision is — matters for driving and balance. Normal field is roughly 180 degrees horizontally. Glaucoma erodes it from the edges, leaving acuity intact until late disease.
  4. Near visionThe Snellen chart tests distance. A person with presbyopia (age-related loss of near focus, typically from the mid-40s) may read 20/20 at distance and still struggle with a menu or their phone.
  5. Depth perceptionStereo vision depends on both eyes working together and cannot be inferred from a single-eye acuity score.

Visual acuity is the most tested aspect of vision — but it is only one piece of a complete visual picture.

American Academy of Ophthalmology

Driving and legal thresholds

In the United States, most states require a minimum corrected visual acuity of 20/40 in the better eye for an unrestricted licence. Drivers with acuity between 20/40 and 20/70 can often obtain a restricted licence (daylight only, no highway, slower speed limits). Requirements vary significantly by state — always check your state's DMV rules.

Legal blindness is federally defined as best-corrected acuity of 20/200 or worse in the better eye, or a visual field of 20 degrees or less. Legal blindness does not mean total blindness — the term describes the threshold at which an individual qualifies for certain disability benefits and services. Many people who are legally blind retain some usable vision.

What your result means

A single online test result is an estimate. Screen resolution, ambient lighting, browser zoom, and your own positioning all introduce variability that a calibrated optometrist's room eliminates. Use your result as a starting point, not a final verdict.

Frequently asked questions

What does 20/20 vision mean?
20/20 means your distance sharpness matches the normal population standard: you can read at 20 feet what a typical eye reads at 20 feet. It is not perfect vision — roughly one-third of adults have it naturally, and some people see better (20/15 or 20/10).
Can you have vision better than 20/20?
Yes. 20/15 and 20/10 are real measurements. Someone with 20/15 vision can resolve detail at 20 feet that a normal eye needs to be 15 feet away to see. Many young adults with healthy eyes can read the 20/15 line on a Snellen chart.
What does 20/40 vision mean for driving?
20/40 is the most common minimum standard for an unrestricted driver's licence in the United States. It means your distance acuity is reduced enough that you need to be 20 feet from an object a normal eye could read from 40 feet. Many people with 20/40 vision correct it fully with glasses or contacts.
What is legally blind vision?
In the US, legal blindness is defined as best-corrected visual acuity of 20/200 or worse in the better eye, or a visual field of 20 degrees or less. At 20/200, you need to be 20 feet from an object a normal eye reads from 200 feet away. It does not mean total blindness — many legally blind people retain some useful vision.
Why doesn't 20/20 vision mean perfect sight?
The Snellen fraction only measures the sharpness of high-contrast letters at distance. It says nothing about your colour vision, contrast sensitivity, peripheral field, near focus, or depth perception. A person with 20/20 acuity can still have colour blindness, early glaucoma, or poor contrast sensitivity that meaningfully affects daily vision.

Free interactive test · ~4 min

Check your visual acuity now

A two-minute screen-based Snellen test gives you an estimate of your distance sharpness and where you fall on the acuity scale.

Take the visual acuity test

Keep reading

References

  1. 1.American Academy of Ophthalmology. What Does 20/20 Vision Mean? AAO Eye Health.
  2. 2.Cleveland Clinic. 20/20 Vision: What It Means, Tests & Corrective Methods. Cleveland Clinic Health Library.
  3. 3.All About Vision. 20/15 Vision: Better or Worse Than 20/20? AllAboutVision.com.
  4. 4.Prevent Blindness. State Vision Screening and Standards for License to Drive. LowVision.PreventBlindness.org.
  5. 5.American Medical Association Journal of Ethics. Legal Vision Requirements for Drivers in the United States.

This guide is educational and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified clinician about your individual circumstances.