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Online color vision screening

Screen for color weakness online in minutes

A focused color vision screening experience for self-checks, schools, hiring flows, and accessibility teams. Clear steps, simple language, and practical follow-up guidance.

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Read the guide

Screening preview

A calmer first-pass workflow

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01

Take a short screen-based check

View a small set of test plates in steady lighting and answer what you can see.

02

Review a plain-language summary

Translate the pattern into a clear explanation instead of a confusing technical label.

03

Decide on the next step

Retest, share the screening internally, or plan a professional follow-up if needed.

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Example outcome

What a helpful result looks like

Possible red-green confusion pattern
Retest on another screen or in better lighting
Seek a formal eye exam if the same pattern repeats

The experience should reduce uncertainty, not create it.

Explain that this is a screening, not a medical diagnosis.
Call out how display quality and glare can affect the outcome.
Offer practical next-step guidance for schools, families, and teams.

Recommended entry points

Use the homepage as the theme entry point and move the explanation into dedicated pages

Instead of stacking more homepage modules, these pages split the most common search intents into crawlable destinations. That makes it easier for search engines and AI search to understand what this is, who it is for, and where users should start.

Open the test centerStart the screening
Open
Test Center
A crawlable hub that connects the screening flow, result guidance, and scenario pages.
Open
Self-checks for adults and families
For people and parents who want a calm first-pass screen before deciding on retesting or clinical follow-up.
Open
School screening workflows
Useful when schools need a low-friction first pass before referrals or classroom accommodation conversations.
Open
Accessibility review
Explains how color-vision screening supports design teams that are auditing interfaces for color-only meaning.
The three things the homepage should make obvious

Screening, not diagnosis

Reduce misinterpretation first, then route users to the explanation and scenario pages that match their need.

Each use case needs its own URL

Self-checks, school workflows, accessibility reviews, and result interpretation should not fight for space inside one URL.

Give AI text it can cite directly

Visible explanatory copy and FAQs are more reliable for AI search than relying on interactive modules alone.

Where to go next
If you already know your intent, go straight to the matching page.
Read the results guide firstI want a personal self-checkI need a school workflow guide

Why teams use it

Simple enough for self-checks, structured enough for intake

Use a lightweight screening flow before you schedule a full clinical evaluation.

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Screening steps

2

Supported locales

24/7

Any-device access

Screening flow

A straightforward first-pass experience

Built to help users move from curiosity to a clear next step without getting lost in medical jargon.

Screening flow

Built to help users move from curiosity to a clear next step without getting lost in medical jargon.

Lead users through a short, focused sequence that explains what the result means and what it does not mean.

Screening flow

Guided test flow

Lead users through a short, focused sequence that explains what the result means and what it does not mean.

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Guided test flow
02
Result summaries
03
Repeatable checks
04
Shareable follow-up
Guided test flow1 / 4

Real screening scenarios

Use it for self-checks, intake, and accessibility reviews

The product works best as a clear first pass before a formal diagnosis or workplace accommodation process.

Real screening scenarios

The product works best as a clear first pass before a formal diagnosis or workplace accommodation process.

  • Quick pre-check before a professional exam
  • Mobile and desktop friendly
  • Plain-language results for non-specialists
  • Useful for schools, families, and teams

Use it for self-checks, intake, and accessibility reviews

The product works best as a clear first pass before a formal diagnosis or workplace accommodation process.

4
01
Quick pre-check before a professional exam
02
Mobile and desktop friendly
03
Plain-language results for non-specialists
04
Useful for schools, families, and teams
01
02
03

Experience principles

Product guidance that actually helps

Good screening content makes people feel oriented, not overwhelmed.

Set expectations

Explain that the screening is informative, not a formal medical diagnosis.

Make retesting easy

Encourage users to retry under consistent lighting and screen settings before overreacting.

Clarify likely patterns

Show which color ranges may be difficult instead of returning a vague pass or fail.

Recommend next steps

Point users to professional follow-up when the same pattern appears more than once.

Support accessibility reviews

Help design and product teams audit interfaces that rely too heavily on color alone.

Use calm language

Inform users clearly without making the result sound more definitive than it is.

FAQ

Common questions before you run a screening

Who it's for

Common teams and people who need a fast first-pass screen

School Health Office

Student intake

We need a quick screen before recommending a formal vision check for students who may struggle with color-coded materials.

Occupational Clinic

Workplace screening

A lightweight online check helps us decide when to escalate a case into a formal occupational vision assessment.

Parents and Guardians

Home self-check

We want a calm first pass that helps us decide whether a child should be booked in for a professional eye exam.

Recruitment Team

Role-fit screening

For safety-sensitive roles, we need a clearer intake step before sending candidates into more formal testing.

Accessibility Designer

Interface review

We use quick screening references to sanity-check whether our product communicates critical meaning with more than color.

Product QA Team

Color-dependent UI checks

A fast screening mindset helps us catch flows that break down when users cannot reliably separate red and green signals.

Community Health Program

Outreach workflow

We need a simple tool that people can understand quickly before we refer them into the healthcare system.

Driving School

Learner intake

A first-pass screen is useful when students disclose previous vision concerns and need guidance on what to do next.

Industrial Safety Team

Shift readiness

We care about clear escalation paths when a screen suggests someone may struggle with color-coded safety signals.

Teachers and Tutors

Learning support

A quick screening can help explain why some diagrams, maps, and classroom color cues are harder for a learner to use.

Operations Manager

Internal referral flow

We need consistent language for when a team member should repeat the check, ask for accommodation, or book a formal assessment.

Individual Self-check

Personal follow-up

Sometimes people just want a calm, understandable first pass before deciding whether to see an eye-care professional.

Need a calmer, clearer screening flow?

Use product language that explains the test, the result, and the next step without template noise.

Start screeningRead the FAQ

Updates

Color vision screening notes

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Quick online color vision screening for schools, teams, and self-checks

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