Single or Dual PD—Which One Do You Need?

2025-01-27 11:10:40

When you buy new eyeglasses, one of the most important measures taken is the distance between your pupils, also known as Pupillary Distance or PD. Just like shoes need the right size for comfort, eyeglasses must have the right PD measurement if they are to work properly. There are two ways to measure PD: take one total measurement across both eyes, known as Dual PD, or measure each eye separately, known as Single PD.


Pupillary Distance (PD): Single vs. Dual Measurements  

Your pupillary distance (PD) is the space between your pupils, measured in millimeters. PD measurements come in two main forms: Single PD (also called Monocular PD) and Dual PD (also called Binocular PD). Both serve the same purpose but work differently for various eyewear needs.


Single/Monocular PD

Single PD measures the distance from the bridge of your nose to the center of each pupil separately. For example, your right eye might measure 31mm and your left eye 32mm, written as "31/32." This detailed measurement is particularly valuable for:

 High-power prescriptions

 Progressive lenses

 People with asymmetrical facial features

 Complex vision corrections


Dual/Binocular PD

Dual PD is one measurement spanning the distance between both pupils. It's typically expressed as a single number, like "63mm." This simpler measurement works well for:

 Basic single-vision lenses

 Standard prescriptions

 Symmetrical face shapes

 Ready-made reading glasses


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Key Differences at a Glance:

Feature

Single PD

Dual PD

Format

Two numbers (e.g., 31/32)

One number (e.g., 63)

Accuracy Level

More precise

Standard precision

Best Used For

High prescriptions, progressives

Basic prescriptions

Measurement Method

Individual eye measurements

Total distance measurement

Cost to Measure

Usually higher

Generally lower

Common Range

29-35mm per eye

58-70mm total


How to Read PD on Your Prescription

Common PD Notation Formats

 Single Number Format: When you are reviewing your prescription, you may find a single number recorded in a format such as "PD 63" or simply "63." This reflects your Dual PD and is the total millimeter distance between your pupils. Doctors sometimes record this as "Distance PD: 63" or "B.PD 63," where "B.PD" is an abbreviation for Binocular PD. All these reflect the same meaningcomplete distance across both pupils.

 Split Number Format: A split format is two numbers with a slash between them, like "31/32." The first number is your left eye measurement, and the second shows your right eye measurement. This may be written in more formal notation by doctors or other medical professionals, like "OD 31 / OS 32," where OD is your right eye and OS refers to your left eye. Both are saying the same thing—your measurements for each eye.


Where to Find PD on Your Prescription

PD measurements can appear in various places on your prescription form. Most commonly, you'll find it at the top or bottom of the prescription. Some doctors place it in a dedicated "Additional Information" section, while others include it in a specific box labeled "PD" or "Pupillary Distance." The location varies depending on the prescription format your doctor uses.


What If PD Is Not on My Prescription?

Many prescriptions do not come with the PD measurement, and that is okay. This is normal, as eye doctors often do not include PD because optical shops have to take their own measurements for accuracy in many cases. Some doctors keep PD measurements in their office records rather than on the prescription itself. If you need your PD measurement and it's not on your prescription, you can call your eye doctor's office or simply walk into an optical shop for a measurement. While online tools exist for self-measurement, they're generally less reliable than professional measurements.


Quick Reference Chart

Notation Type

Example

Meaning

Single Number

"PD 63"

Total distance between pupils

Split Numbers

"31/32"

Individual eye measurements

OD/OS Format

"OD 31 OS 32"

Right eye/Left eye measurements

With Distance Note

"Dist. PD 63"

Distance PD measurement

All PD measurements use millimeters as the standard unit, with most adults falling between 58-70mm for total PD measurement.


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How to Choose the Right PD for Your Glasses

Your ideal type of PD measurement depends on several key factors. Stronger prescriptions, especially over +/-4.00 diopters, may want more precise measurements for the best possible vision correction. The type of lenses also makes a difference: specialized lenses require more detailed measurements than basic lenses. Your facial symmetry plays a part, too, as some people are just naturally asymmetrical in their pupil positioning and therefore require individual eye measurements.


When Single PD Works Best

Complex vision needs require single PD measurements. If your prescription is stronger, such as +/-4.00 or higher, it's recommended that you make the measurements for each eye in order to position your lenses perfectly. Single PD measurement is a perfect application of Progressive Lenses because these progressive lenses have a multiple-point focus that aligns exactly with the eyes. These can benefit better Single PD measurements because of asymmetrical features in people—for example, if one eye is higher than the other.


When Dual PD Is Sufficient

With simple correction needs, Dual PD serves the purpose just fine. For single vision, basic prescriptions less than +/- 4.00 usually would not require the extra precision needed in measuring both individual eyes.


Professional Recommendations

Prescription Type

Recommended PD Type

Reason

Strong (>+/-4.00)

Single PD

Higher precision needed

Progressive/Multifocal

Single PD

Multiple focal points require exact alignment

Basic Single Vision (<+/-4.00)

Dual PD

Standard precision sufficient

Reading Glasses

Dual PD

Simple lens design

Asymmetrical Features

Single PD

Accounts for facial differences

Most eye care professionals suggest getting your PD measured in person rather than relying on self-measurement, especially for complex prescriptions or specialized lenses.


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How Experts Measure Your PD

What Tools Do Experts Use?

If you go to an eye care professional, they will measure your PD with highly technical machinery. The main gadget is something called a pupillometerthink of it as special binoculars that give super-precise readings of the distance between your pupils. They also check such measurements with simple but quite efficient tools: a PD ruler—a so-called PD stick—and digital modern devices with cameras able to make a shot of just exact measures of where the pupils of the eye are situated.


How Does the Measurement Work?

Your optician will first measure your "distance PD" by asking you to look at something far away—this help your eyes settle into their natural position. If you need reading glasses or progressive lenses, they'll also measure your "near PD" by having you focus on something close up. They will keep your head straight and steady throughout the process to get an accurate measurement; this usually takes only a few minutes in total.


Get the Most Accurate PD Reading Every Time

What to Watch

Why It Matters

How to Get It Right

Head Position

Even slight tilts can throw off your measurement by 1-2mm

Keep your chin level and look straight ahead, just like taking a passport photo

Room Lighting

Bright or dim light makes your pupils change size, affecting accuracy

Make sure the room has normal, steady lightingnot too bright or dark

Where You Look

Your eye position shifts when looking at different spots

Focus on one specific point at eye level about 20 feet away (or as directed)

Staying Still

Any head movement can lead to wrong measurements

Use the headrest provided and try to stay as still as possible for a few seconds

Professional measurements typically achieve accuracy within 0.5mm, which is crucial for optimal vision correction. To ensure this precision, opticians often take multiple measurements and average the results.

Pro Tip: Think of it like taking a clear photothe steadier you are, the better the results!


Quality Checks

Before finalizing measurements, professionals perform several verification steps:

 Compare measurements with standard ranges

 Take readings from different angles

 Cross-reference with previous measurements if available

 Verify measurements match facial symmetry


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Get Your Perfect PD Measurement Today  

Whether you need a Single PD for complex prescriptions or a Dual PD for basic lenses, it makes all the difference in how well eye glasses will work for you. As online measurements may seem so convenient, nothing replaces the accuracy of a professional measurement at your local eye care center. Set off right into perfect sight: schedule that professional PD through your eye-care provider at times when you get new glasses or an updated prescription for proper glasses. Your eyes are worthy of only the best, and proper PD creates the foundation for comfortable and truly effective eyeglasses.