Eye Care Service
Paediatric Eye Care
Eye care for kids should be fully covered, fully unhurried, and built around how your child sees the world — not a five-minute screening on the way somewhere else. Our optometrists handle the comprehensive exam in-house, and connect your child to our paediatric ophthalmology partners at Uptown Eye Specialists when something needs more.
annual exam to age 19
recommended age
has an undetected vision issue
unhurried, kid-paced
Why Kids’ Eyes Are Different
Children’s eyes need their own kind of exam
A child’s visual system is still developing well into the school years. Refractive errors, eye-coordination problems, and conditions like amblyopia (lazy eye) and strabismus (eye misalignment) often develop quietly — children rarely complain because they don’t yet know what “normal” vision looks like. Many learning, behavioural, and attention issues that turn up at school are uncorrected vision problems in disguise.
That’s why a paediatric eye exam isn’t an adult exam in a smaller chair. It uses different techniques (pictures instead of letters, retinoscopy for pre-readers, fixation behaviour assessment for infants), takes a different rhythm (interactive, child-paced), and looks for different things (visual milestones, eye alignment, accommodation, depth perception). Done early and done right, it catches problems while they’re still highly treatable.
The window matters — especially for amblyopia
Amblyopia is the leading cause of vision loss in children, and it’s highly treatable when caught before age 7. After that, the brain’s plasticity for reweighting input from the weaker eye drops sharply. The first eye exam at 6–9 months and a follow-up between ages 2 and 5 aren’t optional — they’re the screening windows that matter most.
When to Book
The recommended timeline — and signs not to wait
The Canadian Association of Optometrists publishes the standard schedule. We follow it, and we adjust based on what we find at each visit.
| Age | CAO Recommendation |
|---|---|
| 6–9 months | First comprehensive eye exam — assesses visual development, eye alignment, and rules out congenital conditions |
| 2–5 years | At least one exam during the preschool years — the screening window for amblyopia closes around age 7 |
| Before kindergarten | School-readiness exam — confirms vision is ready for the visual demand of classroom learning |
| 6–19 years | Annually — prescriptions change rapidly, myopia can progress, and the visual demand of school is high |
Don’t wait for the next scheduled visit if you notice
- Squinting, sitting too close to screens, or holding books unusually close — possible refractive error
- An eye that turns in or out, especially when tired — possible strabismus
- One eye that wanders, or a noticeable difference between the two eyes in photos — possible amblyopia or strabismus
- Frequent eye-rubbing, headaches after reading, or complaints of tired eyes — possible accommodation or convergence issue
- Difficulty with depth perception, frequent bumping into things, or clumsy ball-sport coordination — possible binocular vision issue
- A school vision screening that flagged a referral, or a teacher’s observation about reading or copying from the board — book the comprehensive exam
- Family history of childhood vision problems, high prescriptions, or amblyopia — earlier and more frequent exams are appropriate
OHIP fully covers your child’s eye exam — every year, to age 19
There’s no copay, no deductible, and no qualifying-condition requirement. Bring your child’s health card. If we identify a condition that needs follow-up — such as a strabismus monitoring schedule, amblyopia recheck, or a significant refractive change — those medically necessary follow-up visits are also covered.
What’s Included
A comprehensive exam, child-paced
A paediatric eye exam at U Optical takes 30 minutes or more — never a five-minute screening. We use age-appropriate techniques throughout, explain everything in language your child understands, and document everything for year-over-year tracking.
Vision check, age-appropriate
For pre-readers, we use the Lea symbols chart (pictures instead of letters), retinoscopy (an objective measure of refraction that doesn’t require your child to read or even speak), and fixation-behaviour assessment for infants. For older children, standard letter charts plus a careful refraction. Glasses are recommended only when they meaningfully help — never reflexively.
Eye alignment and binocular vision
The Hirschberg corneal reflex test, cover-uncover testing, and ocular motility checks for strabismus and amblyopia. We assess how the two eyes work together — convergence, accommodation, depth perception — because problems here often surface as reading difficulty, headaches, or “I just don’t like reading.”
Eye health screen
Slit-lamp examination of the lids, lashes, cornea, and lens. Examination of the optic nerve and retina (dilated when clinically indicated). Intraocular pressure measurement when age and cooperation allow. Digital retinal photography is part of the standard chart for ongoing reference.
Discussion with parent and child
We explain findings in plain language — to you and to your child — talk through any glasses recommendation or referral, and set a clear next-visit timeline. If anything falls outside routine optometry, we connect you to our paediatric ophthalmology partners at Uptown Eye Specialists with your file already in their system.
Common Findings
What we look for — and what we do about it
Most paediatric findings fall into one of four categories. Each has a clear pathway — in-house when appropriate, specialist referral when indicated.
Refractive errors
Most commonMyopia (nearsightedness), hyperopia (farsightedness), and astigmatism are the most common findings. We prescribe glasses or contact lenses when correction meaningfully helps your child see and learn. For children with progressing myopia, we offer dedicated myopia management to slow progression.
Amblyopia — “lazy eye”
Time-sensitiveOne eye doesn’t develop normal vision because the brain favours the stronger eye during early childhood. Highly treatable when caught early — with patching, atropine penalisation, or specialist treatment as appropriate. Best results before age 7. Moderate-to-severe cases are co-managed with our paediatric ophthalmology partners at Uptown Eye Specialists.
Strabismus — eye turns
Always assessEye misalignment that may be constant or intermittent, present in one direction or several. We assess and monitor at U Optical; surgical correction (when indicated) is performed by our paediatric ophthalmology partners at Uptown Eye. Pseudostrabismus — the appearance of crossed eyes in young children with prominent epicanthal folds — is also identified and explained.
Vision-related learning concerns
Often overlookedConvergence insufficiency, accommodative dysfunction, and binocular vision issues can present as reading difficulty, attention complaints, or headaches at school. We assess all of these as part of every paediatric exam and discuss appropriate next steps — sometimes reading lenses, sometimes vision therapy referral, sometimes simply a different prescription.
Specialist Network
When your child needs more than optometry
Some paediatric findings need a paediatric ophthalmologist — a medical doctor with subspecialty training in children’s eye disease. When that’s the case, your child isn’t starting over with a new clinic. Our partners at Uptown Eye Specialists take the next step with your file already in hand.
Dr. Fariba Nazemi
Paediatric Ophthalmology · Uptown Eye SpecialistsMedical and surgical paediatric ophthalmology — including amblyopia management, strabismus surgery, paediatric cataract and retinal evaluation, and complex refractive cases that exceed routine optometric care.
Dr. Dexter Furlonge
Paediatric Ophthalmology · Uptown Eye SpecialistsMedical and surgical paediatric ophthalmology — with a focus on paediatric cataract, congenital eye conditions, complex strabismus, and the evaluation of children with developmental or systemic conditions affecting the eyes.
No re-referral, no re-explaining, no re-testing. We coordinate the handoff with the file your child’s optometrist has already built — so the appointment with the paediatric ophthalmologist starts from the right place. Visit Uptown Eye Specialists to learn more about the broader paediatric ophthalmology team.
School Readiness
Vision and the school day
Up to 80% of classroom learning is visual — reading, board work, screen tasks, copying notes, fine-motor coordination. A child whose vision isn’t quite right can struggle academically without anyone realising it’s a vision issue. School-administered vision screenings catch some problems but miss many: they typically check distance acuity only, and don’t assess focusing, eye coordination, or eye health.
Signs of healthy school-age vision
- Sees the board clearly without squinting or tilting the head
- Reads at a normal distance — not bringing books unusually close or holding them at arm’s length
- Doesn’t complain of headaches or tired eyes at the end of the school day
- Tracks moving objects smoothly — for ball sports, writing, and reading across a line
- Has age-appropriate hand-eye coordination — not bumping into things, not consistently missing catches
- Maintains attention during reading without losing place or skipping lines
- Doesn’t cover one eye when reading or watching TV
If anything on this list doesn’t quite match your child — book the exam
The next step is a comprehensive paediatric eye exam, not a wait-and-see. Most school-age vision issues are highly treatable, and the comprehensive exam at U Optical is fully OHIP-covered to age 19.
Children’s eye health beyond our walls
U Optical is proud to support FORSEE Canada — an independent registered non-profit foundation advancing global access to eye care through research, education, and outreach. Their Specs for Sight programme provides eyewear to communities without access to optical care, and their broader mission supports children’s eye health locally and internationally.
FORSEE Canada is not a clinic and not a UVG service line — it’s a charitable foundation that we and other UVG brands sponsor. Learn more at forseecanada.com.
Common Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources cited
- Canadian Association of Optometrists — Eye Health Library · Children’s Vision
- Government of Ontario — What OHIP covers
- Ministry of Health — Schedule of Benefits, Optometry Services
- College of Optometrists of Ontario — collegeoptom.on.ca
- American Association for Pediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus (AAPOS) — aapos.org
- American Academy of Ophthalmology — EyeSmart · Amblyopia
Book Your Child’s Exam
Book your child’s eye exam.
Annual eye exams are fully OHIP-covered for children to age 19 — no copay, no deductible. Book online in under a minute, or call us at (416) 292-0336.
