Texas Administrative Code
Title 37 - PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONS
Part 1 - TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY
Chapter 15 - DRIVER LICENSE RULES
Subchapter C - EXAMINATION REQUIREMENTS
Section 15.51 - Vision Tests

Universal Citation: 37 TX Admin Code § 15.51

Current through Reg. 50, No. 13; March 28, 2025

Applicants applying for a Texas driver license must meet the following vision standards: (For Commercial Driver License (CDL) vision standards refer to §16.8 of this title (relating to Qualifications To Drive in Interstate Commerce) and §16.9 of this title (relating to Qualifications To Drive in Intrastate Commerce))

(1) The standards for two-eyed vision are as follows:

(A) without corrective lenses, 20/40 or better each eye and both together: no visual restriction;

(B) without corrective lenses, worse than 20/40 with either eye or both together: refer to specialist;

(C) with corrective lenses, 20/50 or better with best eye or both together; any score with other eye: restrict to corrective lenses;

(D) without corrective lenses, 20/50 or better with best eye or both together with specialist's statement that vision cannot be improved: no visual restriction;

(E) with corrective lenses, 20/60 or 20/70 with best eye or both together; any score with other eye: restrict to corrective lenses, daytime only, 45 miles per hour speed limit, any other advisable restriction;

(F) without corrective lenses, 20/60 or 20/70 with best eye or both together with specialist's statement that vision cannot be improved: no visual restriction, daytime only, 45 miles per hour speed limit, any other advisable restriction;

(G) with or without corrective lenses, worse than 20/70 with best eye or both together; no further improvement possible: fail.

(2) The standards for one-eyed vision are as follows:

(A) without corrective lenses, 20/25 or better in best eye: no visual restriction;

(B) without corrective lenses, worse than 20/25 in best eye: refer to specialist;

(C) on all other case scores: use two-eyed vision standards;

(3) for driver licensing purposes, an acuity score of worse than 20/200, with corrective lenses or specialist's statement that improvement of 20/200 or better is not possible: is considered blind.

(4) Color blindness is checked on all original applicants.

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