Reading Glasses (Near-Add) Diopter by Age Calculator
Presbyopia is the *age-related stiffening of the crystalline lens* and *weakening of the ciliary muscle* that makes close-up focus harder from your 40s — *menus get blurry around 40*, *phones need to be held further at 45*, *price tags require squinting at 50*. This tool uses the *Hofstetter 1944 "minimum amplitude of accommodation" regression (15 − 0.25 × age)* combined with *Borish's classic prescribing rule* — reserve half the available accommodation for comfort, prescribe the shortfall as a near-add — plus the elementary physics *near-vision demand = 1 / reading distance*. Output snaps to the *nearest drugstore step (+0.50 to +3.00 D)*, giving you the closest off-the-shelf reader power to start from. Enter age and your habitual reading distance (50–70 cm for laptops, 30–40 cm for books, 25–35 cm for phones) so you can pick separate pairs for different tasks.
Enter a positive age and reading distance.
Suggested near-add power
+2.00 D
Moderate presbyopia
each eye
Common age → add table (NHS / AAO guide)
| Age | Typical add |
|---|---|
| < 40 | — |
| 40–44 | +1.00 D |
| 45–49 | +1.50 D |
| 50–54 | +2.00 D |
| 55–59 | +2.25 D |
| 60+ | +2.50 D |
⚠️ Educational starting point for *off-the-shelf* reading-glasses shopping only. A proper prescription, monovision, anisometropia, astigmatism or cataracts must be assessed by a licensed optometrist.
Formula
Near-vision dioptric demand (D): demand = 1 / reading distance(m) Minimum amplitude of accommodation (Hofstetter, 1944): min_amplitude = max(0, 15 − 0.25 × age(years)) Recommended near-add (Borish rule — reserve ½ of available accommodation): raw_add = demand − 0.5 × min_amplitude Then snap to drugstore 0.25 D steps: result = round(clamp(raw_add, 0, 3.0), 0.25)
- · **Reading distance is the most underestimated variable — measure it before picking diopters**: (a) *books / menus* 30–35 cm — the average reference; (b) *smartphones* 25–28 cm — closer than a book and so needs *+0.25 to +0.50 D more*; (c) *desktop monitors* 55–70 cm — further than a book and so needs *0.50 to 0.75 D less* (or a dedicated "intermediate" pair); (d) *music stand / workshop* 60 cm+ — many people don't need reading glasses at all. Buy *at least two pairs*: one *0.25 D stronger* for books / phone and one *0.50 D weaker* for the computer / paperwork.
- · **The biology behind the Hofstetter formula**: crystalline-lens proteins are *manufactured for life and never recycled*, so they accumulate from birth and lose elasticity continuously. The passive *amplitude of accommodation* is ~14 D before age 30, ~2.5 D at 50, and effectively *zero* by 60. Hofstetter (1944) fit a *15 − 0.25 × age* regression to 1000+ subjects as the conservative *minimum* clinical envelope; individual variation can run *±2 D* with ethnicity, diabetes and use-habits as modifiers. Asia's high myopia rate (>50 % in Hong Kong / Singapore / Taiwan) means existing refractive error often makes presbyopia bite earlier — *needing readers before age 40* is not unusual.
- · **Why reserve "half" the accommodation**: the optometric consensus (Borish 2006; Benjamin's *Clinical Refraction* §11) is *never to prescribe to the maximum* — using every last diopter of amplitude tires the ciliary muscle within 15–20 min and triggers headaches and dry eye. Keeping ½ in reserve halves the load on the focusing muscle and allows *2–3 h of comfortable reading*. So the prescribed add should *only fill the gap* between the remaining demand and your reserved half — never "let the lenses do all the work", which accelerates accommodative decline (use-it-or-lose-it).
- · **When you must see an optometrist instead of self-prescribing**: (a) *interocular difference > 1.00 D* (anisometropia) — OTC readers will produce diplopia or dizziness; (b) *astigmatism ≥ 0.75 D* (~30 % of adults) — drugstore lenses have no cylinder so vision stays blurry; (c) *cataract, glaucoma or diabetic retinopathy* in either eye; (d) *headache, ghosting or double vision* while wearing OTC readers — could be convergence insufficiency needing prism; (e) *clear presbyopic symptoms before age 38* — uncover a possible accommodative spasm, cycloplegia or early endocrine cause.
- · **Single-vision readers vs bifocals vs progressives**: this tool sizes a *single-vision reader* near-add. Alternatives: (a) *bifocals* — distance on top, near on bottom with a visible segment line; (b) *progressives* — gradient from distance → intermediate → near, no line but with *peripheral distortion zones*, 1–2 weeks to adapt; (c) *monovision* — one eye corrected for distance, one for near, brain auto-selects, no glasses; (d) *multifocal contact lenses* or *refractive lens exchange / PRELEX* — pricier permanent options. The same diopter computed here is *also* the value used as the "near-add" segment in bifocal and progressive prescriptions, so it's a sound starting point.
- · **References**: (1) Hofstetter HW, 1944, *Am J Optom* — accommodation amplitude regressions; (2) Borish IM, *Clinical Refraction* 3rd ed. (Butterworth-Heinemann 2006) §11; (3) Benjamin WJ (ed.), *Borish's Clinical Refraction* 2nd ed.; (4) American Academy of Ophthalmology, *Presbyopia Patient Guide*; (5) NHS — Reading Glasses Guide; (6) Glasser A & Campbell MCW, 1998, *Vision Research* — lens biomechanics; (7) Charman WN, 2008, *Ophthalmic Physiol Opt* — presbyopia mechanisms review.
Frequently asked
I'm 45 and menus are blurring — what strength should my first pair of readers be?
**Most 45-year-olds start at +1.00 D or +1.25 D**. **Walk-through with this tool**: (a) Hofstetter minimum amplitude = 15 − 0.25 × 45 = *3.75 D*; (b) demand at 35 cm reading distance = 1 / 0.35 = *2.86 D*; (c) reserve ½ accommodation = 1.88 D; (d) shortfall = 2.86 − 1.88 = *0.98 D* → snap to 0.25 D steps = *+1.00 D*. **Practical shopping steps**: (1) at the pharmacy or online, try *+1.00, +1.25, +1.50* side by side; (2) bring an actual book or menu and read 30–40 seconds without squinting; (3) pick the *weakest pair* that's still clearly readable — presbyopia gets worse with age, so leave headroom; (4) if all three are still too weak (you're still holding text away), your habitual distance is probably ~25 cm (phone-style); retry +1.25 / +1.50. **Caveats**: (a) if your two eyes differ by > 0.50 D, OTC readers will give you a headache — get a proper exam; (b) don't grab the "age-appropriate" +2.00 just because grandma uses one — over-strong readers blur AND fatigue the accommodation muscle.
I have presbyopia-like symptoms before 40 — should I start wearing readers?
**See an optometrist first to rule out other causes — don't self-prescribe**. **Common reasons for presbyopia-like symptoms before age 40**: (a) *early-onset presbyopia* — high myopia (over −5.00 D), diabetes or certain meds (sedatives, tricyclic antidepressants) can accelerate accommodative decline; (b) *accommodative spasm* — sustained near-work (coders, designers) freezes the ciliary muscle, sometimes called "pseudomyopia"; it needs *cycloplegic drops* to release; (c) *uncorrected latent hyperopia* — you thought your distance vision was 20/20 but you're actually farsighted and were burning accommodation to compensate; by ~35 the reserve runs out; (d) *convergence / fusion problems* — binocular co-ordination issues that cause headache and "jumping letters" at near. **Red flags that need a proper exam**: (1) *one-eye-only* vision drop; (2) ghosting / dizziness / nausea while wearing readers; (3) blind spots, flashes or new floaters; (4) *eye-socket pain* within minutes of wearing readers. **None of these are solved by drugstore readers — you need a dilated exam plus fundoscopy.**
Can one +2.00 pair of readers cover both phone and laptop?
**No — both ends will be uncomfortable**. **Why**: (a) phone at 25 cm needs *4.00 D* of focusing power, so *+2.00* leaves you blurry; (b) laptop at 60 cm needs only *1.67 D*, so *+2.00* is too strong and text "floats" and blurs; (c) forcing one pair to cover both causes *constant accommodative tension* and *neck pain* (you end up bobbing your head to hunt the sweet spot). **The right answer is three pairs** at three diopters: (a) *book / menu (35 cm) → +1.50 to +2.00*; (b) *phone (28 cm) → ~+0.50 stronger = +2.00 to +2.50*; (c) *desktop (60 cm) → ~+0.75 weaker = +1.00 to +1.50*. **Each pair costs US$5–15 at a drugstore — total still ~1/10 the price of one progressive lens** but gives noticeably better near vision than progressives at any single distance. **Alternative**: one *progressive lens* covers all three distances, but expect *2–3 weeks of adaptation*, *side-distortion zones*, and *stair-descent disorientation* — not for everyone.
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Enter age, body weight and pregnancy status; the tool reports your daily caffeine safe limit in mg using EFSA / FDA / AAP guidance (adults 400 mg, pregnant 200 mg, adolescents 3 mg / kg), then converts it into equivalent cups of coffee, tea, cola and energy drinks — the standard tool for managing day-to-day caffeine intake.
Daily Magnesium Intake Target Calculator
Enter age, sex and life stage (pregnancy / lactation); the tool returns the daily magnesium mg target using the NIH RDA tables (adult men 400–420 mg, women 310–320 mg) and converts it into common food portions — an essential mineral for nerves, muscles, heart rhythm and bones.
Daily Vitamin D Intake Target Calculator
Enter age, sex, life stage and your preferred unit (IU or mcg); the tool returns the daily vitamin D target from the NIH / IOM Dietary Reference Intakes — infants 400 IU AI, ages 1–70 600 IU and > 70 years 800 IU. It also shows the adult Tolerable Upper Intake Level (UL = 4 000 IU / day) and equivalent food servings (salmon, cod-liver oil, fortified milk, egg yolks, UV-exposed mushrooms).
Daily Potassium Intake Target Calculator
Enter age, sex and life stage; the tool returns the daily potassium mg target from the US NASEM 2019 DRI / NIH ODS Potassium Fact Sheet AI table (adult men 3 400 mg, women 2 600 mg, pregnancy 2 900 mg, lactation 2 800 mg) and converts it into common high-potassium food servings (banana, baked potato, avocado, spinach, white beans).
Daily Vitamin C Intake Target Calculator
Enter age, sex, life stage and smoking status; the tool returns the daily vitamin C mg target from the NIH / IOM Vitamin C Fact Sheet RDA (adult men 90 mg, women 75 mg, smokers +35 mg) and converts it into common food portions.
Daily Zinc Intake Target Calculator
Enter age, sex and life stage; the tool returns the daily zinc mg target from the NIH / IOM Zinc Fact Sheet RDA (adult men 11 mg, women 8 mg, pregnancy 11 mg, lactation 12 mg) — central to immunity, wound healing and the sense of taste / smell.
Daily Selenium Intake Target Calculator
Enter age, sex and life stage; the tool returns the daily selenium µg target from the NIH ODS Selenium Fact Sheet RDA (adults 55 µg, pregnancy 60 µg, lactation 70 µg, UL 400 µg) — a trace mineral essential to antioxidant defence, thyroid-hormone synthesis and immunity.
Daily Folate (Folic Acid) Intake Target Calculator
Enter age, sex and life stage; the tool returns the daily folate target in µg DFE from the NIH ODS Folate Fact Sheet RDA (adults 400, pregnancy 600, lactation 500, supplement UL 1000 µg / day) — the B-vitamin central to cell division, red-blood-cell formation and the prevention of fetal neural-tube defects.
Workout Rest Between Sets Calculator
Enter your training goal (maximal strength, hypertrophy, muscular endurance, power) and load intensity (% 1RM); the tool returns evidence-based rest-interval seconds between sets and the matching set / rep ranges, per NSCA Essentials of Strength Training (4th ed.) and ACSM guidelines.
Daily Vitamin B12 Intake Target Calculator
Look up your daily vitamin B12 RDA (μg/day) by age, sex and pregnancy / lactation status using NIH ODS values, with B12 amounts in common foods and supplementation notes for vegetarians and vegans.
Daily Iodine Intake Target Calculator
Look up your daily iodine RDA (μg/day) by age, sex and pregnancy / lactation status using NIH ODS values, with iodine content in iodised salt, seafood and common foods — guarding against deficiency (goitre) and excess (thyroid dysfunction).
Daily Vitamin A Intake Target Calculator
Look up your daily vitamin A RDA (μg RAE/day) and tolerable upper intake (UL) by age, sex and pregnancy / lactation status using NIH ODS values; converts retinol and β-carotene to RAE so you can avoid deficiency (night blindness) and retinol overdose.
HRV RMSSD Calculator (Heart Rate Variability)
Paste a list of RR intervals (in ms, comma- / space- / newline-separated); the tool returns RMSSD = √(mean((RR_{i+1} − RR_i)²)), SDNN, mean heart rate, and an interpretation following the 1996 Task Force HRV standards — handy for sanity-checking HRV figures from a Garmin, Apple Watch or Polar device.
Running Shoe Replacement Distance Calculator
Enter the shoe type (max-cushion, daily trainer, racing flat and more), runner weight tier and miles already logged; the tool uses the 300–500 mile sports-medicine wear-out range to return the miles remaining and a months-of-use estimate at your current cadence — handy for avoiding knee pain and plantar fasciitis from worn midsoles.
Caffeine Half-Life Decay Calculator
Caffeine's half-life averages about 5 hours — a 200 mg morning coffee still leaves ~100 mg in your blood at 5 pm and ~50 mg by 11 pm. Enter the dose and time taken to see exactly how much is still circulating when you try to sleep.
BMI Prime Calculator
BMI Prime = BMI ÷ 25 — expresses any BMI as a fraction of the normal-weight upper limit, so 1.00 means right at the cap and 1.20 means 20 % above it. Enter height and weight to read it instantly.
Spherical Equivalent (SE) Eye Prescription Calculator
Spherical equivalent SE = Sphere + (Cylinder ÷ 2) collapses a cylindrical (astigmatism) prescription into a single spherical power — routinely used for ordering contact lenses, refractive-surgery screening, and basic vision reports. Also returns the vertex-compensated corneal-plane power for high Rx.
Pregnancy Weight Gain Calculator (IOM Guidelines)
Enter pre-pregnancy height and weight (for BMI), gestational week and current weight; the tool returns the recommended total weight-gain range and weekly rate for singleton or twins based on the Institute of Medicine (IOM/NAM 2009) guidelines, comparing to actual gain.
Life Expectancy by Current Age Calculator
Enter current age and sex; using the WHO Global Health Observatory period life table, the tool estimates remaining life expectancy and projected age at death assuming present-day mortality.
Sunscreen Amount & SPF Protection Time Calculator
Using the dermatology 2 mg/cm² standard, work out how many grams of sunscreen (≈ the "shot-glass rule") you need for full body or each zone, then estimate reapplication interval from the classic "SPF × natural burn time" formula.
Hike Difficulty (Petzoldt Energy Miles) Calculator
Enter trail distance, elevation gain and walking pace; using outdoor educator Paul Petzoldt's "energy miles" rule (+2 miles per 1,000 ft gain), the tool returns effective distance, estimated time and a difficulty rating.
Marathon Fueling Gels Calculator
Enter race distance, projected finish time and carb intake target (g/h); based on the 30–90 g/h sports nutrition range, returns how many gels and at what spacing.
Cooper 12-Minute Run VO₂max Calculator
Enter your 12-minute run distance (m or mi), age and sex; the tool estimates VO₂max via Cooper's 1968 JAMA formula and maps it to a six-band age/sex fitness classification.
Max Heart Rate (HRmax) Formula Comparison Calculator
Enter age (and optional resting HR); compare HRmax estimates from Fox (220−age), Tanaka, Gellish and the Nes / HUNT3 formula side-by-side, plus Karvonen training-zone bpm ranges.
Bone Density T-Score / Z-Score Interpretation Calculator
Enter DEXA-scan T-score (and optional Z-score); classifies as normal / osteopenia / osteoporosis per WHO 1994 + ISCD 2019 criteria and shows relative fracture-risk multiplier.
Cycling FTP (Functional Threshold Power) Estimator + Training Zones
Enter your best 20-minute average power (watts) to get your FTP (= 20-min × 0.95) and the seven Coggan training zones (Z1 Recovery through Z7 Neuromuscular).
WHO Oral Rehydration Solution (ORS) Recipe Calculator
Enter the total water volume (ml) — get the grams of salt, glucose (or substitute sucrose) and optional potassium chloride needed for a WHO/UNICEF low-osmolarity ORS, the standard rehydration recipe for diarrhoea worldwide.