Wearing Contact Lenses Every Day but Your Eyes Feel More Tired?

Do any of these symptoms sound familiar?

  • Dry eyes all day, getting noticeably worse in the afternoon
  • Vision blurs easily, with occasional stinging
  • By evening you just want to take your lenses out, but you don’t want to switch back to glasses
  • Your vision feels worse than it used to, even though you haven’t had an eye exam recently

If you wear soft contact lenses every day and have been living with this kind of discomfort long-term, the problem may not be your eyes. It may be a mismatch between your lens choice, your wearing habits, and how you actually use your eyes.


The 5 Real Reasons Soft Lenses Leave Your Eyes “Worn Out”

Reason 1: Lens water content can make dry eye worse

The “soft and comfortable” feel of soft lenses comes from their water-containing material. But that same property creates a problem: the lens draws water from your tear film to maintain its own hydration.

In an air-conditioned office, staring at a screen for long stretches with a reduced blink rate, tear evaporation speeds up. The lens’s “water-drawing effect” thins the tear film even further, creating a vicious cycle:

Eyes get drier → lens draws more water → the ocular surface gets even drier → your eyes feel worse

A typical person blinks about 15–20 times per minute, but while focused on a screen that can drop to 5–7 times per minute, reducing how long the tear film stays stable by 60–70%.

Reason 2: Insufficient oxygen transmission and chronic corneal hypoxia

The cornea has no blood vessels; it gets oxygen directly from the air and tear film. A contact lens is like placing a “lid” over the cornea, and a lens with low oxygen permeability keeps the cornea in a mild, chronic state of oxygen deprivation.

Symptoms of chronic corneal hypoxia:

  • Feels fine early in the day, but gets uncomfortable by the afternoon
  • The whites of the eyes redden easily
  • In long-term wearers, new blood vessels appear at the corneal periphery (visible under a slit lamp)

Traditional HEMA-material soft lenses have an oxygen transmissibility (Dk/t) of about 10–30, while silicone hydrogel dailies can reach 80–160 — a huge gap. If your soft lenses aren’t silicone hydrogel, the oxygen issue is worth a serious look.

Reason 3: Deposit and contamination buildup

The microporous surface structure of soft lenses readily attracts:

  • Proteins and lipids from the tear film
  • Airborne particles
  • Residue from cosmetics and sunscreen

Even with monthly lenses, deposits accumulate with each re-wear, degrading the lens’s optical performance (things look blurry and you can’t tell why) and irritating the ocular surface (a gritty, foreign-body sensation).

One of the advantages of dailies is that they avoid this problem — a fresh lens every day, no deposit buildup. But dailies have their own issues (see Reasons 1 and 2).

Reason 4: Prescription design that doesn’t match how you use your eyes

Many people’s soft lens prescriptions are designed for “best static vision” — the power that lets you read the chart clearly under standard lighting. But modern visual demands are far more complex:

  • For people doing prolonged near work, an over-corrected myopic prescription keeps the ciliary muscle in constant strain
  • For the 35–45 age group with early signs of presbyopia, the current lens power may make near vision more effortful
  • For people with anisometropia, two lenses with a large difference in power can create binocular fusion stress

Reason 5: Wearing time beyond what your eyes can handle

The “safe wearing time” for contact lenses varies by person and by lens, but most people wear theirs well beyond the recommended limit.

Many put lenses in at 7 a.m. and don’t take them out until 11 p.m. — 14 hours. Even high-quality silicone hydrogel lenses place a significant burden on the tear film and cornea over that span, especially for people who spend the whole day in air conditioning or in front of a screen.


Should You Switch to Rigid RGP Lenses?

Not everyone needs to switch to RGP, but the following situations are worth a serious evaluation:

Your situationWhy RGP is worth considering
You have dry eye and soft lenses feel uncomfortableRGP lenses don’t absorb water, so they don’t worsen dry eye
High astigmatism (2.00 D or more)RGP correction is more stable thanks to the tear-lens mechanism
High demands on visual clarity (designers, drivers)RGP has a stable optical surface and higher image quality
Long wearing hours (10+ hours a day)RGP has high oxygen transmission, better suited to long wear
Post-surgical or irregular corneasRGP can mask corneal surface irregularities

Full Comparison: Soft vs. Rigid Contact Lenses

ComparisonSoft Daily (Silicone Hydrogel)Soft MonthlyRigid RGP
Comfort (first wear)★★★★★★★★★★★★ (needs adaptation)
Visual clarity★★★★★★★★★★★★
Oxygen transmission★★★★★★★★★★★★
Astigmatism correction★★★★★★★★★★★
Dry-eye friendliness★★★★★★★★★
Annual cost (estimate)NT$10,000–18,000NT$4,000–8,000NT$5,000–10,000
Environmental impactHigh (daily disposal)MediumLow

Suggestions for Improving Your Contact Lens Wear

You don’t necessarily need to switch to RGP right away. First, try these adjustments:

1. Confirm your lens material If your current soft lenses are HEMA material (conventional hydrogel), consider upgrading to silicone hydrogel. Oxygen transmissibility improves substantially, and the dry feeling usually eases too.

2. Shorten your wearing time Try to keep daily wear under 10–12 hours. Switch to glasses once you get home after your commute, giving your eyes time to “breathe” at home.

3. Use preservative-free artificial tears While wearing lenses, you can use preservative-free artificial tears (such as hyaluronic acid formulas) to supplement the tear film and reduce friction. Note: ordinary eye drops that contain preservatives are not suitable for use while wearing lenses.

4. Get regular eye exams to confirm your prescription Contact lens power differs from spectacle power (it requires a vertex distance correction), and your prescription can change over time. We recommend an annual exam to confirm your contact lens prescription is still appropriate.

5. Regular ocular surface health assessments If you’re a long-term lens wearer, we recommend an annual corneal health assessment to check for any signs of new blood vessel growth or corneal epithelial damage.


FAQ

Q: How long can I wear contact lenses before my eyes get dry?

There’s no fixed time — it varies with your tear production, lens material, and wearing environment. Generally, air-conditioned spaces, screen work, and wearing lenses for more than 10 hours all accelerate dryness. If your eyes start feeling uncomfortable by the afternoon every day, it’s worth an assessment to see whether you need a different lens material or should consider RGP.

Q: Are daily lenses healthier than monthly lenses?

In terms of lens hygiene, dailies are better than monthlies (a fresh lens every day, no deposit buildup). But daily doesn’t mean the oxygen issue is solved — that depends on the material. The best dailies are high-Dk silicone hydrogel dailies, which balance both hygiene and oxygen transmission.

Q: Can I occasionally sleep in my contact lenses overnight?

Strongly not recommended. Sleeping in soft lenses substantially raises the risk of corneal hypoxia, and bacteria on the corneal surface also multiply faster during sleep. You may feel nothing in the short term, but over time it can lead to infectious keratitis, which in severe cases can affect vision. If you experience persistent pain, redness, or blurred vision, please see an eye doctor promptly.

Q: Where in Xinzhuang or Banqiao can I get my contact lens wear evaluated?

Beyond Visual Optometry (Xinzhuang and Banqiao locations) with Optometrist YoYo (licensed optometrist) offers a complete contact lens wear assessment, including corneal topography, tear film analysis, an evaluation of your current lens material and wearing time, and a full consultation on whether RGP is right for you. Call +886-2-2206-6700 (Xinzhuang) or +886-2-2253-1246 (Banqiao), or book online.