Inspection Magnifiers

Magnifiers built for close inspection. Quality control, electronics, gemstones, print, and fine detail work.

How magnification works

Up to 3x, Large print, newspapers, books · 4x to 10x, Standard reading, labels, maps · 12x to 30x, Fine print, low vision, hobbies · 40x and above, Jewellery, electronics, inspection

33 products

Inspection magnifiers are made for one purpose. Seeing fine detail clearly enough to judge quality, spot a flaw, or read a tiny marking. They are the tools of quality controllers, gemmologists, printers, electronics technicians, and anyone who needs to check small work against a standard.

Loupes for close inspection

The classic inspection tool is the loupe, a small high-power lens held close to the eye. Jewellers use 10x triplet loupes to grade gemstones. Printers use higher-power loupes to check dot patterns. Loupes are compact, fast to use, and need good light.

Measuring and scaled magnifiers

Some inspection magnifiers include a measuring reticle, a fine scale etched into the lens. These let you measure a thread count, a print dot, or a component size directly under magnification. Linen testers and threadcounters are the common examples.

Stand and pod magnifiers

For longer inspection work, a stand or pod magnifier holds the lens steady over the object at a fixed focus. This frees both hands and removes the fatigue of holding a loupe to your eye. Many include bright LED rings for shadow-free viewing.

Lighting is not optional

Inspection work lives or dies on lighting. The detail you are checking is small, often low-contrast, and your own head can cast a shadow over it. Built-in LED, ideally a ring or dual-LED setup, is the standard for serious inspection magnifiers.

Choosing by task

  • Gemstones and jewellery. 10x triplet loupe.
  • Print and dot inspection. 10x to 30x scaled loupe or linen tester.
  • Electronics and PCBs. Stand or lamp magnifier with bright LED.
  • Textiles and thread count. Linen tester with measuring scale.

Match the magnification to the smallest detail you must resolve, then make sure the lighting is strong enough to see it without glare.