6m
By the 6th month, your baby will acquire eye movement control and develop eye-hand coordination skills.

Additional Resources

Doctor’s Note video tips
Further reading

An important part of baby care is eye care.

Infant Eye Care

Infant Eye Care

Parents, would you know if your infant had a vision problem? Chances are, probably not.

Infant Eye Care: Focus on the facts

An important part of baby care is eye care.

By 4 months of age, an infant’s colour vision is similar to an adults,

At birth, your baby can see blurred patterns of light and dark.

4m

Infant Eye Care

Copyright © Alberta Association of Optometrists.

Infant Eye Care: 

Focus on the facts

When should your baby receive their first eye exam?

Your baby should receive their first eye exam between six and nine months of age.

Many vision problems can be detected at this stage and the earlier a condition is caught, the higher the chance of correction.

If vision problems go undetected, young children may not even realize that anything is wrong because they assume that everyone sees the same way they do.

Alberta eye exam coverage for infants

There is Alberta Health coverage towards annual eye exams for infants until their 19th birthday.

Book Now

Your Alberta optometrist is a skilled professional

Find An Optometrist

Alberta optometrists have specialized education. They complete a Bachelor of Science degree, followed by a four-year Doctor of Optometry degree from an accredited university.

Alberta optometrists are experts who play an important role in the vision, eye health, and overall health of your family. 

Important infant eye information for parents

  • Lazy eye, or amblyopia, is another condition that becomes apparent within the first six months of your baby’s life. 
  • This condition describes weak vision or vision loss in one eye as a result of an uncorrected prescription. If detected or treated before eight years of age, it will often resolve completely. 
  • It’s important to treat amblyopia early—with vision therapy, eyeglasses and/or contact lenses, or patching—as treatment becomes very difficult later on. Untreated, amblyopia can lead to blindness in the affected eye. 

Your Alberta doctor of optometry recommends that babies have their first exam between six and nine months. They will check to ensure: 

  • Your baby’s eyes are healthy.
  • The eye muscle movements and alignment are developing properly. 
  • The eyes are focusing together. 

What your baby’s first eye exam includes

Symptoms are difficult to detect

Most vision problems have no easy-to-detect symptoms, which makes it almost impossible to tell if your infant has difficulty seeing.

Strabismus/Crossed eyes

Lazy eye/Amblyopia

  • For the first six months, an infant’s eyes can appear slightly crossed or out of alignment, but this is normal.  
  • If your infant’s eyes appear significantly crossed or remain misaligned after six months of age, contact your doctor of optometry right away. -Your child may have strabismus, commonly known as crossed eyes, a condition that needs to be treated with eyeglasses, contact lenses, prisms and/or vision therapy and, in some cases, surgery. 
  • If left untreated, the ignored eye will become unable to function normally and will become largely unused. This may result in the development of lazy eye. 
  • Newborns have all the ocular structures necessary to see, although these are not yet fully developed.   
  • At birth, your baby can see blurred patterns of light and dark.
  • During the first four months, their visual horizon will expand from a few centimetres to many metres. Their vision will become clearer and colour vision will begin to develop. Their two eyes will start working together.  
  • By four months of age, an infant’s colour vision is similar to an adult's, and by the sixth month, your baby will acquire eye movement control and develop eye-hand coordination skills. 

Infant Eye Care Doctor’s Note Video Tip: Dr. Rajan Mistry

Infant Eye Care Doctor’s Note Video Tip: Dr. Nobe Nijjar

Infant Eye Care Doctor’s Note Video Tip: Dr. Jean Shen