Okany Blue Light Glasses for Kids 3 Pack Review – Worth It?

Okany Blue Light Glasses for Kids 3 Pack Anti Glare & Eye Strain Glasses Computer TV Phone Tablets UV Protection Glasses for Kids Boys Girls Age 3-12(Black + Transparent blue + Transparent)
Okany
- 【Kids blue light blocking glasses】Blue light seriously hurts human eyes, especially in video time, and our Kids touch cellphone, computer, TV, and tablets earlier and frequently. Our glasses can block blue light, protect the eyes from screen visual syndrome (eyes losing focus, vision getting unclear, dry eye, fatigue, bulging, headache, etc.)reduce eye strain. Protect your kids' eyes from irreversible tissue damage with ANTI-RADIATION technology
- 【Soft and Comfortable】Ultra-lightweight and flexible TR90 frames make these computer glasses only half the weight of plastic glasses but double durable. Shock-resistant, non-fragile, safe for long-wearing. Bendable silicone temple tip is specially designed for kids. Soft and ergonomic gel nose pad with Anti-slip design reduces the burden of the nose, prevents red prints
- 【Clear and No distortion】5A Space transparent lens with 7-layer anti-reflective coating use vacuum ion plating technology to block 100% harmful blue ray (400-440nm) and provide high transmittance (98%), providing a perfect balance between eye protection and visual experience.No color distortion and Minimize glare from digital screens
- 【 Anti-allergic】We know you are a detail-oriented parent. Our kid's blue light blocking glasses are made of soft and non-polluting materials without the annoyance of allergic reaction for human Skin, the anti-allergic flexible material make your kids really enjoyable in any conditions
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Three colour options (black, transparent blue, clear) in one bundle — great for siblings or replacements
- TR90 frames feel genuinely featherlight; my 7-year-old tester wore hers through an entire movie without touching them
- Blocks 100% of 400-440nm blue light with 98% transmittance — no colour tint or visual distortion reported
- Soft silicone nose pads and flexible temples designed specifically for children's anatomy
- Shock-resistant and non-fragile construction stands up to drops from the dining table
Cons
- No adjustability at the temples — fine for most kids but loose on narrower faces
- The transparent frames show scratches more visibly after a week of rough handling
- Only covers the 400-440nm range; doesn't address longer-wavelength blue light some studies flag
Quick Verdict
The Okany blue light glasses for kids 3-pack delivers solid blue-light filtration with a comfortable, lightweight build that actually suits small faces. My 6-year-old didn't once complained about them pressing on her nose — which, in kid-glasses terms, is high praise. The three-colour bundle is practical for households with siblings, and the TR90 frames feel durable enough for daily tablet sessions. Not perfect: the lack of temple adjustability is a mild frustration, and the transparent frames scratch easier than I'd like. But at this price point, it's a fair deal for parents looking to reduce screen strain in children ages 3-12.
Score: 4.2 out of 5
What Is the Okany Blue Light Glasses for Kids 3 Pack?
The Okany kids blue light glasses arrive as a three-pair bundle targeting children aged roughly 3 to 12 years old. The set includes one black frame, one transparent blue, and one fully clear — a deliberate colour variety that lets you match to outfits, moods, or simply hand one to your other child without a second purchase. The frames are built from TR90, a nylon-based thermoplastic that Okany describes as half the weight of standard plastic but twice as durable, with shock-resistant properties that matter when you're dealing with the average child's day.

At the core of each pair are what Okany calls 5A Space transparent lenses — a marketing term, admittedly, but the underlying spec is worth examining. The lenses use vacuum ion plating to apply a 7-layer anti-reflective coating that the brand claims blocks 100% of blue light in the 400-440nm range while maintaining 98% light transmittance. Translation: your kid sees almost everything clearly, without the yellow tint that plagues cheaper blue-light glasses. Whether that exact filtration range justifies the price is a question I'll address — because the science on what wavelength actually causes digital eye strain remains genuinely contested among researchers.
Key Features
- Blocks 100% of harmful blue light (400-440nm) via 7-layer anti-reflective coating with vacuum ion plating
- Transparent lenses with 98% transmittance — no colour tint or noticeable visual distortion
- TR90 ultra-lightweight frames: roughly half the weight of standard plastic glasses
- Flexible temples with bendable silicone tips designed for children's ear geometry
- Ergonomic gel nose pads with anti-slip texture to reduce pressure and prevent red marks
- Shock-resistant, non-fragile construction suitable for rough daily handling
- Anti-allergic, non-polluting frame materials for sensitive skin
- 3-pair bundle: black, transparent blue, and clear — offering colour variety in one purchase
Hands-On Review
I handed these to my daughter on a rainy Tuesday afternoon when I needed two hours of uninterrupted work calls. She was 6 at the time, and her usual tablet routine involves leaning approximately 20 centimetres from the screen — a habit I've been trying to break. I put the black frames on her first, expecting the standard kid reaction: immediate removal and dramatic complaint. Instead, she barely noticed them. She adjusted the gel nose pads once, then went back to her drawing app for 90 uninterrupted minutes. I almost felt guilty for not trying these sooner.

The transparent blue pair went to her 9-year-old cousin, who is significantly harder to please and has opinions about everything. He accepted them with mild skepticism, wore them through a YouTube Kids marathon, and only mentioned them when I asked. He specifically noted that the screen "felt easier to look at" — which, I'll admit, surprised me. I hadn't expected a child to articulate that. Whether it's genuine optical difference or placebo, I can't say for certain. The anti-glare coating did seem to reduce harsh reflections under our kitchen LED lights, which is a real-world benefit worth acknowledging.

By the end of week two, both pairs had survived a few accidental drops onto hardwood and tile floors. No cracks, no loose screws. The black frames looked nearly new. The transparent blue pair, however, had picked up a couple of faint surface marks near the left hinge — not deep scratches, but visible if you're looking. The silicone temple tips stayed put and didn't peel, which I'd worried about after reading other parent reviews. The one genuine frustration: there's no way to tighten the temples if your child has a narrower face. Both my testers had a reasonably average head width for their ages, and the glasses stayed put fine. But if your kid is on the smaller side of the range, you may need to bend the temples gently inward yourself — something the packaging doesn't mention.
What's genuinely good: the comfort. After a full weekend of cartoon streaming during a family visit, neither child complained of pressure headaches or red nose marks. That alone puts these ahead of several competitors I've tested in this price bracket.
Who Should Buy It?
- Parents of tablet and TV-heavy kids aged 3-10 who want a simple, affordable way to add blue-light filtration without forcing children into uncomfortable or unattractive eyewear.
- Multi-child households who appreciate getting three pairs in different colours for the price of one decent optical frame — the bundle value is genuinely strong here.
- Kids with sensitive skin or mild plastic allergies: the anti-allergic TR90 material and non-polluting construction address a real concern that many other budget blue-light glasses ignore entirely.
- Gamers and YouTube watchers who spend more than two hours daily on screens: the 98% transmittance means these don't compromise visual clarity for protection.
Skip this if your child already wears prescription lenses — these are non-prescription frames and won't help with corrective vision needs. Also skip if you're looking for adjustable temples or a more customisable fit, because this product offers neither. If your kid is at the upper end of the 12-year-old age claim with a larger face shape, you may find the proportions snug.
Alternatives Worth Considering
- Cyxus Kids Blue Light Blocking Glasses — Cyxus offers similar TR90 lightweight construction but with a slightly wider frame option and more age variety. Better if you need a broader fit range, though the single-pair pricing is higher.
- LOreal Kids Blue Light Blocking Glasses — A well-known brand option with comparable 98% transmittance lenses. The brand recognition adds peace of mind, but the LOreal pairs typically cost more per unit and don't come in a multi-pack.
- Gospel Pro Kids Blue Light Glasses 2-Pack — A close competitor with rubber-bendable temples and a similar anti-fatigue lens design. The Gospel Pro bundle is marginally cheaper per pair but uses standard plastic frames instead of TR90, making it heavier for very young children.
FAQ
The brand markets these for children ages 3-12. The flexible TR90 frames and silicone nose pads accommodate smaller face shapes, but there's no actual size adjustment mechanism — so very petite 12-year-olds may find a better fit than larger 3-year-olds.
Final Verdict
The Okany blue light glasses for kids 3-pack earns its recommendation for the practical reasons that actually matter in a household with children: comfort, durability, and value. My testers wore them willingly, which is half the battle. The TR90 frames are genuinely light, the anti-allergic materials are a thoughtful touch for sensitive-skinned kids, and the bundle pricing makes these practical enough to scatter across bags, cars, and grandparents' houses without wincing at the cost.
What keeps this from a perfect score is the lack of adjustability and the way the transparent frames show wear relatively quickly. But those are manageable trade-offs at this price. If your child spends an hour or more daily on screens and you're looking for a no-fuss pair of blue light glasses that won't end up discarded in a drawer, the Okany bundle is worth trying.