Why Accuracy Matters: VisionCheck in the Real World
When screening for refractive errors like myopia and hyperopia, accuracy is critical. That’s why we spent the past year testing VisionCheck across diverse real-world environments and user types. The results are in, and they’re strong.
Reliable Across Users. Exceptional with the Right Setup.
VisionCheck was evaluated across two distinct groups:
- All Users & Devices: First-time testers using a variety of smartphones, often in uncontrolled environments.
- Recommended Devices + Experienced Users: Individuals using validated phones (e.g., iPhone 16 Pro, iPhone 15 Pro ) with experience testing themselves or others.

On recommended devices, VisionCheck consistently delivers 94% accuracy, with zero cross-class errors between myopia and hyperopia.
- Dimitrios Bizopoulos, Data Scientist, OptikosPrime
Built for Clinical Confidence
Borderline results, such as between mild refractive error and normal vision, are flagged as Inconclusive, triggering a safe retake. That’s intentional. VisionCheck prioritizes reliability over risky guesses, making it ideal for high-throughput environments where safety and trust matter.
Ready for the Real World
VisionCheck is built to adapt to people, not the other way around.
- 99.9% prediction uptime over the past 90 days
- On-device quality control filters out poor signals automatically
- Environmental tolerance: Adjusts for lighting and framing issues: most inconclusive cases improve with minimal guidance
This makes VisionCheck ideal for use outside traditional clinics. It’s already being evaluated for:
- School screenings by nurses and trained staff
- Workplace wellness programs offering vision checks
- Primary care triage, supporting physicians in early detection
From Clinics to Communities
VisionCheck enables accurate, non-invasive screening where it was previously impractical—opening new frontiers in the fight against preventable vision loss.
Whether you’re screening in a clinic or in the field, VisionCheck helps you move faster, without compromising on quality.