Contact lenses can provide clear, convenient vision when fitted correctly and used responsibly. Proper lens hygiene, regular eye examinations, and adherence to wearing schedules are essential for safe and comfortable contact lens use.
Contact lenses are a safe and effective alternative to glasses for many people, but improper use can increase the risk of eye infections and discomfort. Choosing the right lenses and following recommended care practices helps protect long-term eye health, explains Dr Shibal Bhartiya.
Dr Shibal Bhartiya is a fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator with over 25 years of experience. Her approach focuses on identifying risk before damage is irreversible, simplifying treatment decisions, and protecting vision long-term. Emphasis on early detection, risk assessment, and continuity of care. She is rated 5 stars across 1,500+ patient reviews on Google.
Contact Lenses: A Complete Guide to Wearing Them Safely
Contact lenses give you clear vision without glasses, but they sit directly on your eye, which means small errors in care carry real consequences. Millions of people wear contacts safely every day. The difference between a safe experience and a serious complication is almost always hygiene, habit, and knowing when something is wrong.
I have seen patients come in with preventable contact lens infections, corneal ulcers, and even permanent vision changes, all because of habits that seemed minor: sleeping in lenses, topping up solution instead of replacing it, or ignoring mild redness for a week. None of this needs to happen.
This guide covers how to wear contact lenses safely, which type suits your eyes, what warning signs to never ignore, and how to manage contacts during activities like swimming, exercise, or screen-heavy workdays.
Quick Answer:
Contact lenses are safe when worn as prescribed, removed before sleep, cleaned correctly, and replaced on schedule. Never sleep in non-extended-wear lenses, never top up solution, and remove lenses immediately if your eye turns red, painful, or light-sensitive. Most contact lens complications are preventable with consistent hygiene.
Types of Contact Lenses: Which One Is Right for You?
There is no single best contact lens. The right lens depends on your prescription, your corneal shape, your tear film, your lifestyle, and how disciplined you are about care routines. Here is what the main categories mean in practice.
Daily Disposable Lenses
You open a fresh pair each morning and throw them away at night. No cleaning, no storage, no accumulated protein deposits. This is the healthiest option for most people, especially those prone to dry eyes, allergies, or who simply find lens care routines hard to maintain. The upfront cost per box is higher, but the lower infection risk and convenience offset this for many patients.
Monthly and Bi-Weekly Lenses
These require nightly removal, cleaning with fresh multipurpose solution, and proper storage. The cost per year is lower. The infection risk is higher, not because the lenses are worse, but because more steps mean more chances for errors. If you choose monthly lenses, you must follow the replacement schedule exactly. Wearing a monthly lens for six weeks is not a money-saving strategy. It significantly increases your risk of microbial keratitis.
Extended Wear and Continuous Wear Lenses
Certain silicone hydrogel lenses are approved for overnight wear, some for up to 30 consecutive nights. These allow far more oxygen through to the cornea than older materials. Your ophthalmologist must confirm your cornea tolerates overnight wear before you try these. Even if the lens is approved for extended wear, I recommend most patients remove and clean them daily wherever possible.
Toric Lenses for Astigmatism
Standard spherical lenses do not correct astigmatism. Toric lenses are designed with different powers in different meridians and must align precisely on your eye. If a toric lens consistently rotates or blurs, it needs refitting, not a stronger prescription.
Multifocal Contact Lenses
For patients over 40 who need correction for both distance and near, multifocal contacts distribute power across different zones of the lens. Results vary. Some patients adapt within days; others take weeks. A proper trial period with realistic expectations matters. Reading glasses worn over single-vision contacts is an equally valid option for many.
Rigid Gas-Permeable (RGP) Lenses
These are hard lenses that allow oxygen through without being soft. They provide sharper vision for some prescriptions, including high astigmatism and keratoconus. The adaptation period is longer and they require consistent wear to stay comfortable. If your eye doctor recommends RGP lenses, it is usually for a clinical reason that soft lenses cannot address as well.
Orthokeratology (Ortho-K)
These specialised rigid lenses are worn overnight to gently reshape the cornea, providing clear uncorrected vision during the day. They are primarily used in myopia control for children and young adults. They require close follow-up and precise fitting.
Some Key Pointers
| Type of Lens | What It Means | When to Choose |
| Daily disposable | Fresh lens every day, no cleaning required | Best for allergy-prone eyes, first-time wearers, or inconsistent care routines |
| Monthly lens | Must be cleaned nightly and stored in fresh solution | Lower cost, higher hygiene discipline required |
| Extended wear | Silicone hydrogel approved for overnight use | Requires ophthalmologist confirmation of corneal tolerance |
| Toric (astigmatism) | Designed to align at a specific axis | Must be refitted if rotation causes blur |
| Multifocal | Different power zones for distance and near | Trial period of 2-4 weeks typical for adaptation |
| RGP / hard lens | Gas-permeable rigid material, sharper optics | Longer adaptation period; prescribed for specific clinical needs |
| Ortho-K | Reshapes cornea overnight | Primarily for myopia control; needs specialist fitting |
Table 1: Contact lens types, what they do, and when to choose them.
How to Put In and Remove Contact Lenses Safely
Technique matters more than speed. Develop a consistent routine and follow it every time.
Inserting Your Lenses
- Wash hands thoroughly with soap and dry with a lint-free towel before touching any lens.
- Check the lens is the right way out: it should form a smooth bowl, not a bowl with a rim that flares outward.
- Place the lens on your index finger, hold your upper lid with your other hand, and pull the lower lid down with your middle finger.
- Look up or straight ahead and place the lens directly on the cornea. Blink gently to centre it.
- Always do the same eye first to avoid mixing up lenses.
Removing Your Lenses
- Wash hands first.
- Look up, pull down your lower lid, and slide the lens to the white of the eye before pinching it out.
- Never pull a lens off a dry eye. If it feels stuck, instil a few drops of preservative-free artificial tears, wait 30 seconds, and try again.
Contact Lens Care: The Rules That Actually Matter
Most contact lens infections do not happen because of bad lenses. They happen because of predictable shortcuts. These are the ones I see most often in patients who come in with problems.
Important: Never top up lens solution in your case. Empty it, rinse the case with fresh solution, and let it air dry. Old solution mixed with new does not double the cleaning power. It halves it.
- Use only fresh multipurpose solution or hydrogen peroxide system. Never tap water, saliva, or saline alone.
- Replace your lens case every month. Cases are cheap. Infections are not.
- Rub and rinse lenses even with no-rub solutions. The physical action removes deposits.
- Follow the replacement schedule on your box. A monthly lens worn for 40 days is not a saving. It is a risk.
- Remove lenses before swimming, showering, or any water activity. Acanthamoeba, a microorganism in tap water, hot tubs, and pools, can cause a devastating corneal infection that is extremely difficult to treat.
- Never sleep in lenses unless specifically prescribed as extended wear and discussed with your doctor.
- Give your eyes one or two lens-free days per week if possible.
Contact Lenses and Dry Eyes
Dry eye is the most common reason patients struggle with contact lens comfort. Your tear film has to form normally over the lens surface for clear vision and comfort. When the tear film is unstable, the lens dries out, your vision fluctuates, and the eyes redden by evening.
Note: If your lenses are consistently uncomfortable by 4 to 5 hours into the day, you likely have underlying dry eye that should be treated before reassessing lens type. Using contacts as a bandage over dry eye rarely works long-term.
Options for patients with dry eye who want to wear contacts include: daily disposables (less deposit accumulation), silicone hydrogel materials (higher oxygen transmission), preservative-free lubricating drops approved for use with soft lenses, and in some cases, scleral lenses, which vault over the cornea and maintain a fluid reservoir.
| Situation / Symptom | What It Means | What To Do |
| Lenses dry out within hours | Reduced tear volume or unstable tear film | Evaluate for dry eye before changing lens type |
| Blurred vision that clears with blinking | Tear film breaking up over the lens surface | Preservative-free drops; consider daily disposables |
| Red eyes by evening | Lens-related hypoxia or dryness | Check wearing time; consider silicone hydrogel lenses |
| Discomfort in air-conditioned environments | Low humidity accelerates evaporation | Increase blink rate deliberately; reduce screen time intervals |
| Consistent morning discomfort from first insertion | Extended wear use or incomplete lens hydration | Soak lens for 30 seconds before insertion; reconsider extended wear |
Table 2: Dry eye symptoms during contact lens wear and what to do about them.
Contact Lenses During Sports, Travel, and Screen Work
Exercise and Sports
Soft contact lenses are generally excellent for sports. They do not fog or slip the way glasses do. For swimming or water sports, however, daily disposable lenses are the safest option: put them in just before you enter the water, remove and discard them immediately after. Never wear contacts in a swimming pool, lake, or hot tub with lenses you plan to keep. The contamination risk is significant.
Long-Haul Travel and Flights
Airplane cabins have very low humidity, typically below 20 percent. Lenses dry out faster than usual. Reduce your wearing time, carry preservative-free lubricating drops, and consider switching to glasses for very long flights. Always pack your glasses as a backup when you travel. Never sleep on a flight in non-extended-wear lenses.
Heavy Screen Use
Most people blink far less frequently when staring at a screen. The normal blink rate is 15 to 20 times per minute; in front of a screen, it drops to 5 to 7. This dramatically reduces tear film renewal and lens comfort. Combine this with air conditioning and you have a recipe for dry, uncomfortable eyes by mid-afternoon. The 20-20-20 rule (every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds) helps, but does not fully compensate. Lubricating drops and reduced wearing time on heavy screen days matter more.
Common Contact Lens Problems
| Situation / Symptom | What It Means | What To Do |
| Sudden pain after inserting a lens | Foreign body under the lens or inverted lens | Remove immediately, rinse eye, do not reinsert until symptom resolves |
| Increasing redness over a day or two | Early infection or allergic response | Remove lenses, do not reinsert, see an ophthalmologist within 24 hours |
| Light sensitivity (photophobia) with lens in | Corneal abrasion or early ulcer | Remove lenses, see a doctor the same day |
| Discharge, crusting, or mucus | Conjunctivitis, possibly bacterial or viral | Remove lenses, do not reinsert, do not share towels or pillowcases |
| Lens feels stuck or will not slide | Dry cornea or lens dehydration | Instil preservative-free drops, wait 30 seconds before attempting removal |
| Halo or starbursts around lights with lens in | Lens may be wrong power, wrong fit, or causing corneal changes | See your ophthalmologist for reassessment |
| Comfortable in morning, red and blurred by evening | Lens hypoxia or dry eye | Reduce wearing time; evaluate for dry eye and lens material change |
Table 3: Common contact lens problems, what they mean, and what to do.
When To See a Doctor: Red Flags You Must Not Ignore
These symptoms require removing your lenses immediately and seeing an eye doctor the same day or the next morning at the latest.
- Sudden or increasing eye pain with a lens in or after removal
- Significant redness, especially if one-sided
- Sensitivity to light that worsens over hours
- Vision that is suddenly blurred and does not clear
- Any discharge or unusual mucus from the eye
- A white spot on the cornea (the clear front of the eye)
- Swollen eyelids with eye symptoms
Important: Microbial keratitis (a corneal infection from contact lens wear) is a sight-threatening emergency. Do not wait to see if it improves. Same-day ophthalmologist assessment is not excessive. It is essential.
Can Children and Teenagers Wear Contact Lenses?
Age alone does not determine contact lens readiness. Responsibility, hygiene habits, and motivation matter more. Most ophthalmologists consider contact lenses appropriate for children aged 10 and above if they are motivated, can follow instructions independently, and have a parent who will supervise care initially.
Daily disposables are strongly preferred for children. No case to clean, no solution to manage, lower infection risk. If a child is wearing contacts primarily for cosmetic reasons but has no compelling clinical reason, the conversation should include a frank discussion of risk, not just reassurance.
Myopia control lenses (ortho-K and some multifocals) are a separate, clinically important category for children with progressing myopia and are worth discussing with a specialist if your child’s prescription is changing rapidly each year.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many hours a day can I wear contact lenses?
Most soft contact lenses are safe to wear for 8 to 12 hours daily, though this varies by lens type, your tear film, and individual corneal tolerance. Many patients find 10 to 14 hours comfortable with daily disposables and silicone hydrogel lenses. If you experience dryness, redness, or blur before your usual removal time, that is your eye telling you the limit has been reached for that day. Wearing time is not a fixed number. It is a ceiling that shifts depending on environment, screen use, and your dry eye status on any given day.
Can I sleep in my contact lenses?
Only if your lens is specifically approved for extended wear and your ophthalmologist has confirmed your cornea tolerates overnight use. Sleeping in regular lenses significantly increases the risk of corneal infection, sometimes causing ulcers that leave permanent scarring. The cornea requires oxygen from the environment during sleep, not just through the lens. When you close your eyes in a lens that is not oxygen-permeable enough, the cornea becomes hypoxic and vulnerable. The occasional accidental nap is unlikely to cause serious harm. Consistent overnight wear in non-approved lenses is a different matter.
What is the difference between multipurpose solution and hydrogen peroxide system?
Multipurpose solution cleans, disinfects, and stores lenses in one product and requires a minimum of 4 to 6 hours of soaking. It is convenient and works well when used correctly. Hydrogen peroxide systems use a chemical reaction to neutralise the solution over several hours, leaving no preservatives on the lens. This makes them excellent for sensitive eyes or patients who react to preservatives in multipurpose products. The critical rule with hydrogen peroxide systems is that the lens must complete the full neutralisation cycle, typically 6 hours, before insertion. Inserting a lens into unneutralised hydrogen peroxide causes severe, immediate pain and can damage the cornea.
Is it safe to use tap water to rinse my lenses?
No. Tap water, no matter how clean it appears, can carry Acanthamoeba, a microorganism that causes Acanthamoeba keratitis. This infection is resistant to most standard antibiotic treatments, takes months to treat, and can permanently impair vision. Never rinse lenses or your lens case with tap water. Never shower, swim, or wash your face in tap water while wearing lenses. This is one of the non-negotiable rules of contact lens safety.
Why do my eyes feel fine in the morning but uncomfortable by afternoon with contacts?
This pattern almost always points to dry eye or lens-related hypoxia. As the day progresses, your tear film becomes less stable, the lens surface dries out, and debris accumulates on the lens. Air conditioning, screen use, and reduced blink rate all accelerate this. Solutions include switching to a daily disposable lens, using preservative-free lubricating drops during the day (only those approved for use with contact lenses), reducing wearing time, or having your dry eye formally assessed and treated before continuing contact lens use.
Can I wear contact lenses if I have glaucoma?
Yes, in most cases, though this requires a conversation with your glaucoma specialist. Some glaucoma eye drops can affect contact lens comfort or lens material. If you are using topical medications, confirm with your doctor whether to instil drops before or after inserting lenses, and whether to remove lenses before using certain formulations. Some newer drug delivery systems for glaucoma, including certain ring and lens-based formats still in development, are specifically designed to be worn like a contact lens, so this is an evolving area.
Key Takeaways
- Daily disposable lenses offer the highest margin of safety for most patients.
- Never sleep in lenses unless specifically prescribed and discussed with your doctor.
- Tap water and contact lenses must never come into contact.
- Redness, pain, or light sensitivity with lenses in or after removal is a same-day emergency.
- Dry eye is the most common cause of contact lens discomfort and must be treated, not worked around.
- Replace your lens case monthly and never top up solution.
Book a Consultation
If you are considering contact lenses for the first time, switching types, or experiencing discomfort, a proper contact lens assessment is the right starting point. This includes evaluating your tear film, corneal curvature, prescription, and lifestyle to match you with the lens that fits your eye and your routine.
I see patients in Gurugram and offer second opinions for complex cases including contact lens-related complications, keratoconus, and myopia control in children. Please bring your current glasses prescription and any previous contact lens history.
[Book an Appointment: drshibalbhartiya.com | Phone: +91 88826 38735 ]
This article is part of the Dry Eye Hub. Please also read Basics of Dry Eye, Dry Eye Second Opinion and Dry Eye: A Chronic Disease. Why Vision Becomes Blurred After Reading or Screen Use, and Why Are Your Dry Eye Drops Not Working may also help you understand your problem better.
About the Author
This article was written by Dr Shibal Bhartiya, fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator, Clinical Director at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram, known for ethical, patient-centred glaucoma care and independent glaucoma second opinions. She is also the Program Director for Community Outreach & Wellness; and for the Marengo Asia International Institute of Neuro and Spine.
She has published peer-reviewed research on glaucoma management, examining how treatment decisions should balance medical evidence, patient preferences, and long-term vision outcomes.
As Editor-in-Chief of Clinical and Experimental Vision and Eye Research and Executive Editor of the Journal of Current Glaucoma Practice (Pubmed Indexed, official journal of the International Society of Glaucoma Surgery), Dr Shibal Bhartiya brings editorial and research depth to every clinical decision. Her 200+ publications, including 90+ PubMed-indexed publications and 28 edited textbooks span glaucoma biology, surgical outcomes, health equity, and emerging diagnostics.
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