Ks Drivers License Eye Test

Ks drivers license eye test form

Ks Drivers License Eye Test

Let's suppose you can't read the letters on the 20/20 line, but you can make out the letters on the 20/40 line above it. That means that you can see at 20 feet what those with normal vision can see at 40 feet. You have 20/40 vision. If all you could see was the large E at the top of the Snellen Chart, then your vision would be 20/400. You'd be seeing at 20 feet what a person with normal vision can see at 400.
Thanks to today's corrective lens technology and surgical techniques, having less than 20/20 vision is rarely a major problem. The problems begin when the vision cannot be corrected to 20/20 with glasses, contact lenses, or corrective surgery. There are people, for example, who can barely read that 20/400 Snellen E with their naked eyes, but once they put on their glasses or contacts they can pass the eye test for a driver's license. They may be blind without glasses, but not with them. The legal definition of blindness, by the way, is vision that cannot be corrected to better than 20/200.

Ks Drivers License Eye Test Procedure

For a restricted driver's license, the minimum requirement is 20/80 vision in at least one eye. The vision test for a Kentucky driver's license also includes a visual field requirement of 35 degrees to the right and left of fixation, and 25 degrees above and below fixation. To pass a DMV eye exam, visit a DMV office and read the necessary lines on the Snellen Chart. The minimum acceptable visual acuity is 20/40, so one must be able to read the line corresponding to that level of vision. The DMV also offers the Optec 1000 vision tester as an alternative to the Snellen Chart.

Ks Drivers License Eye Test Requirements

  • Specifically, Kansas: requires drivers age 70 and older to renew their licenses in person requires both a vision test and written test for drivers ages 70 and older renewing in person, and accepts requests to conduct an unsafe driver investigation.
  • To pass a DMV eye exam, visit a DMV office and read the necessary lines on the Snellen Chart. The minimum acceptable visual acuity is 20/40, so one must be able to read the line corresponding to that level of vision. The DMV also offers the Optec 1000 vision tester as an alternative to the Snellen Chart.