Magnifiers

Our full range of magnifiers. Reading, low vision, hobby, inspection, and high power, all in one place.

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

114 products

A magnifier makes the small print of daily life readable again. Mail, prescriptions, books, hobby work, fine detail. With so many types on offer, the trick is matching the magnifier to the job. This page brings the whole range together, and the guide below helps you choose.

Start with the task, not the magnification

The most common mistake is buying the strongest magnifier you can find. Higher magnification shrinks the field of view, so you see less at once. For everyday reading, 2x to 4x is the sweet spot. Save the high power for stamps, coins, and fine inspection.

The main types of magnifier

  • Handheld. Quick to grab for mail, labels, and short reading.
  • Stand and desk. Fixed focus over the page, both hands free.
  • Hands-free and headband. For hobbies, craft, and repair work.
  • Magnifying lamps. Light and enlarge a work area at once.
  • Loupes and high power. For jewellery, coins, and inspection.
  • Electronic. Camera and screen for advanced low vision.

Why lighting matters

For most reading, a built-in LED makes more difference than extra magnification. The light sits next to the lens, lifts contrast, and removes the shadow your own hand or head casts on the page. If you read in a typical living room, choose an LED model.

Glass vs acrylic lenses

Glass is the clearest and most scratch resistant, but heavier. Acrylic is lightweight and travels well, and modern aspheric acrylic gives a near-glass image without the weight. For a large lens you hold for long periods, acrylic is more comfortable.

Choosing the right magnifier

Decide what you most want to read or see, how long you spend doing it, and how much light you have. Short reading suits a handheld, long reading suits a stand or LED model, hobby work suits hands-free, and fine detail suits a loupe. Browse by need or type above to narrow it down.