Brooklyn Resource · Reading Your Eyeglass Prescription
Finally Understand What Your Eye Doctor Wrote — A Brooklyn Optician Explains Every Field.
ABO-NCLE certified, 35+ years — the clearest prescription explanation you’ll find from a working optician.
Block 01
What Every Field on Your Eyeglass Prescription Actually Means.
Your eyeglass prescription is a short document — and almost nobody explains it to you.
Most patients fold it in half and hand it over. They trust that the person on the other side knows what to do with it. That trust is reasonable. But understanding your own prescription has real value.
You can spot a typo. You can confirm that what you ordered matches what was written. You can ask a better question when something doesn’t feel right.
This guide covers every field — OD, OS, sphere, cylinder, axis, add power, prism, and pupillary distance. Plain language throughout. Written by Abe Zami, ABO-NCLE certified optician, NYS License #005762-01, with 35+ years of optical experience.
No jargon without an immediate plain-English definition. No detours. Just the document explained, start to finish.
Block 02
Why Brooklyn Patients Ask Me to Explain Their Prescription Before We Start.
Prescription confusion is a communication gap — one that’s easy to close.
The eye doctor writes a prescription in a format designed for professionals, not patients. Then it gets handed to the patient. Then the patient walks into an optical shop and hands it to someone else. Nobody in that chain is required to explain what’s on it.
That’s the gap.
In my 35 years of optical experience, I’ve reviewed prescriptions from practices across Brooklyn and NYC. Some were perfectly straightforward. Some had unusual notation. Some had values that warranted a quick call back to the prescribing doctor before I placed the order.
Patients across Brooklyn walk in holding a prescription they received at an exam on Flatbush Avenue or Neptune Avenue — and they’ve been carrying it for weeks without knowing what a single number means. That’s not a problem with the patient. It’s a fixable gap. This page fixes it.
“Almost nobody explains it to you. This page fixes it.”
Block 03
OD, OS, Sphere, Cylinder, Axis, Add Power, Prism — Each One Defined.
Every field on your prescription exists for a specific reason — here is what each one does.
OD and OS
OD stands for oculus dexter — Latin for right eye. OS stands for oculus sinister — Latin for left eye. OU means both eyes together. Almost every standard eyeglass prescription uses these abbreviations.
Your right eye is always listed first. If the sides are reversed when ordering, the lenses go in the wrong positions.
Sphere (SPH)
The sphere value is the main correction number. It tells the optician how much lens power you need to bring your vision into focus.
A negative sphere — like −2.50 — means you’re nearsighted (myopic). You see nearby things clearly, but distance is blurry. A positive sphere — like +1.75 — means you’re farsighted (hyperopic). The larger the number in either direction, the stronger the correction required.
If sphere is the only value on your prescription with no cylinder, you have no astigmatism. That’s the simplest lens to make.
Cylinder (CYL) and Axis
These two values always appear together. They describe astigmatism — an irregularity in the curvature of your cornea or lens.
Cylinder tells the optician how much correction is needed for your astigmatism. Axis — measured in degrees from 1 to 180 — tells the optician the exact orientation of that correction on the lens.
Here’s what matters: cylinder without axis is useless. Axis without cylinder is useless. Both must be present and accurate for the astigmatism correction to work. If the axis is off by even a few degrees on a strong cylinder prescription, the lenses can cause blur, tilt, and distortion that patients correctly sense but can’t explain.
Add Power
Add power — written as Add or Addition on your prescription — is a positive number that appears when you need bifocal or progressive lenses. It tells the optician how much additional magnification your near zone requires.
If you see +1.75 Add or +2.25 Add on your prescription, it means you have presbyopia — the gradual loss of near focusing ability that affects nearly everyone after age 40. The add value is applied on top of your distance prescription to calculate the reading zone power.
Add power is not a separate prescription. It works with your sphere value to create the near correction.
Prism and Base
Most prescriptions have no prism. When prism does appear, it’s a clinically significant detail that requires precise lens fabrication.
Prism — measured in prism diopters — corrects for binocular vision problems, including conditions where the eyes don’t align precisely. Base tells the lab which direction the prism should point: base in, base out, base up, or base down.
If your prescription has prism, it was prescribed by your eye doctor for a specific reason. It must be fabricated and verified precisely — it is not an element to approximate.
Pupillary Distance (PD)
Pupillary distance — or PD — is the measurement in millimeters from the center of one pupil to the center of the other. It tells the optician exactly where to place the optical center of each lens so it lines up with where your eye actually looks.
PD is sometimes printed on a prescription. Often it isn’t — in which case the optician must measure it in person before lenses can be made. A PD that’s even a few millimeters off on a strong prescription produces prismatic distortion: the lenses are technically correct, but your eyes have to work to compensate for the misalignment. That’s a common source of headaches and eye strain.
This is one of the central reasons prescription eyewear requires in-person measurement — and why self-measured PD values from a mirror or a phone app carry real risk for stronger prescriptions.
Block 04
When the Numbers Look Unusual — and What That Usually Means.
Unusual numbers on a prescription almost always have a clinical explanation — here are the most common ones.
Very high sphere values — like −8.00 or −9.50 — indicate high myopia. This is a clinically distinct situation that affects lens thickness, lens design choices, and frame selection. It’s not a transcription error. It means the patient needs a specialist-level fitting conversation, not just a standard order.
Cylinder without axis, or axis without cylinder. This is rare on a legitimate prescription, but it happens when a prescription is handwritten and a field gets missed. It cannot be filled as written. The prescribing doctor needs to be contacted before fabrication begins.
Add power on a young patient. Add power appearing on a prescription for someone under 40 is worth a second look. It sometimes indicates accommodative insufficiency or another condition — not simply presbyopia. Worth confirming before ordering progressives.
Prism in a notation the patient has never heard of. Patients with prism prescriptions sometimes don’t know they have prism. They were told to get glasses and handed the slip without explanation. When I see prism on a prescription a patient brought in without knowing it was there, I walk them through what it means before we do anything else.
Plus cylinder vs. minus cylinder notation. Optometrists typically write prescriptions in minus cylinder format. Ophthalmologists often use plus cylinder format. The correction is mathematically identical — but the numbers look completely different on paper. When a patient compares two prescriptions from different doctors and thinks the values changed dramatically, it’s often just a notation format difference. This can be converted with simple math.
Block 05
What I Look for Before Filling Any Prescription in My Practice.
Abe Zami · ABO-NCLE Certificate #018067 · NYS Optician License #005762-01
I review every prescription before placing any order — and it’s a step that consistently makes a difference.
Before I take anyone’s prescription to the lab, I check a few things that most patients wouldn’t think to ask about.
First, I confirm the prescription is valid under New York State rules — not expired, not beyond the date the prescribing doctor specified. New York requires a current prescription from a licensed OD or MD before I can make lenses. That’s the law, and it protects the patient.
Second, I look at whether all the required fields are present and internally consistent. A cylinder value with no axis raises a question. A sphere value in a range that usually requires high-index lenses gets a lens design conversation before the order goes in.
Third, I check the PD. If it’s on the prescription, I verify it looks reasonable. If it’s not — which is common — I measure it here, in person, with the actual frame the patient has chosen. Not estimated. Measured.
This pre-fabrication review prevents remakes, prevents weeks of discomfort, and prevents the frustration of glasses that technically match the prescription but don’t function correctly in real life.
I’ve been doing this for 35 years. The review takes a few minutes. What it prevents takes much longer to undo.
“The review takes a few minutes. What it prevents takes much longer to undo.”
Block 06
Signs That Your Prescription Needs Clarification Before Lenses Are Made.
Some prescriptions benefit from a quick follow-up with the prescribing doctor — and a thorough optician will tell you before placing the order.
Here are the signals worth paying attention to:
A missing value — sphere, cylinder, or axis — is not something to guess at. The lab cannot fabricate correctly without complete information.
A notation that’s difficult to read — particularly on handwritten prescriptions — should be clarified before the order is placed. A transcription error in the cylinder or axis value produces lenses that are measurably wrong.
Prism you didn’t know you had. If you’re seeing prism on your prescription for the first time and your eye doctor didn’t mention it, it’s worth a quick call to confirm it’s intentional and to understand why it was prescribed. Prism is always prescribed for a reason.
A prescription approaching its expiration date. In New York, adult prescriptions are valid for two years. Prescriptions for patients under 18 are valid for one year. If your prescription is close to expiring, it may be worth checking with your prescribing doctor about whether it still accurately reflects your current vision — especially if anything has changed.
If any of these situations apply, I’ll tell you before anything is ordered. That’s the review process at Viewtopia — and it’s why patients come to Kings Highway confident that their order is right before it ever reaches the lab.
Block 07
Prescription Literacy Resources for Brooklyn and NYC Eyeglass Wearers.
Viewtopia Optical serves patients across Brooklyn from our Kings Highway location at 810 Kings Hwy, Brooklyn, NY 11223.
We fill prescriptions from optometrists and ophthalmologists throughout the borough — Flatbush, Sheepshead Bay, Gravesend, Bensonhurst, Bay Ridge, Midwood, and beyond. If you have a current prescription from any licensed OD or MD, you can bring it here.
No appointment needed.
Block 08
Bring Your Prescription to Kings Highway — We’ll Review It Together Before Anything Is Ordered.
Bring in your prescription and we’ll go through it with you — every field, every value, before a single lens is ordered.
This is the review that should happen before any optical order is placed.
Come into Viewtopia Optical at 810 Kings Highway, Brooklyn. Walk-in visits welcome. Or call ahead if you have a question you’d like answered before you make the trip.
Abe Zami. Licensed. Certified. Present for every visit. 35+ years of prescriptions read, interpreted, and filled correctly — one patient at a time.