Your eye doctor may diagnose you with farsightedness when performing a routine comprehensive eye exam. Or, you may be diagnosed after seeing a healthcare professional about headaches, difficulty focusing on nearby objects, or pain around the eyes.

Glasses, contacts, or another form of vision correction can help you see things near to you more clearly.

Hyperopia Symptoms

See an eye care provider if vision or eye symptoms cause discomfort or make it hard for you to complete some tasks.

Hyperopia symptoms may include:

Difficulty focusing on nearby objectsEyestrainPain around the eyesA headache around the forehead

Headaches often occur because most people are able to compensate for farsighted vision by subconsciously focusing harder.

Unfortunately, because of this ability to compensate, many children with hyperopia often pass vision screenings that use an eye chart given by schools and pediatricians. This is why it is important for all children to have a complete eye exam including distance and near vision testing and refraction testing if indicated.

Hyperopia Causes

Hyperopia is caused by a defect of the eyeball. The eyeball of a farsighted person is shorter than normal, causing light to be focused behind the retina instead of directly on it. In some cases, the eye may be of normal length, but the cornea may be flatter than normal.

How Hyperopia Is Diagnosed

Farsightedness is detected by a simple retinoscopy test. During this non-invasive test, your eye doctor will shine a light in your eye to see how the light bends in relation to your retina.

Young people are dilated during this test so they are unable to involuntarily mask their farsightedness by accommodating their vision. Farsightedness is usually detected early in life.

Hyperopia Treatment

If you are farsighted, glasses or contact lenses can help correct the problem. But not everyone needs them, especially children.

Many children are born with hyperopia but usually outgrow it as the eyeball grows longer. Glasses are often reserved for children with moderate hyperopia and accommodative esotropia (a form of cross-eye) or reduced visual acuity. There is insufficient evidence to recommend that all children with moderate hyperopia alone should wear glasses.

In more severe cases, hyperopia treatment may include surgery such as an ocular implant or LASIK vision correction. 

A Word From Verywell

Don’t be discouraged if you are told that you are farsighted. Farsightedness is easily treated with glasses or contact lenses. Refractive surgery is an option for adult patients who wish to see clearly without wearing glasses. 

If you are farsighted, you may only need to wear glasses for reading or working on the computer. Depending on your age and the amount of farsightedness, you may have to wear them all of the time.