Many people describe vision changes in simple terms: blurry vision, dry eyes, or night blindness. It’s easy to blame this on screen time or tired eyes, but in some cases, micronutrient deficiency plays a real role—especially when the diet leans heavily on white rice and more processed foods.
Still, it’s important to know this clearly: not all poor eyesight is caused by vitamin deficiency. Glasses grade changes, cataracts, diabetes, and other eye conditions are also common. The goal is to understand when nutrition might be part of the problem—and when you should see an ophthalmologist right away.
The Most Common Vitamin Deficiencies Linked to Vision Problems
The nutrients most often connected to poor eyesight symptoms include:
Vitamin A (Retinol): the classic “vision vitamin.” It helps your eyes produce rhodopsin, a pigment in the retina needed for low-light vision. Low Vitamin A can lead to nyctalopia (night blindness) and xerophthalmia (dry eyes), and in severe cases, corneal ulcers and scarring.
Vitamin B-complex (especially B12): low Vitamin B12 can be linked to optic neuropathy, where the optic nerve is affected. This may show up as gradual, painless changes like central blur and color dullness.
Vitamin C & Vitamin E: these are antioxidants that help protect eye tissues from oxidative stress and free radical damage, which are associated with ageing-related eye problems like cataracts.
Lutein & Zeaxanthin: carotenoids that support macular health. They’re often described as “natural sunglasses” because they help filter light and support the macula (central vision).
What Poor Eyesight Can Mean (and Why the Symptom Matters)
Poor eyesight is not a diagnosis. Here are common symptom patterns and what they can suggest:
Night Blindness: a classic early sign of Vitamin A deficiency in the right setting.
Dry Eyes, gritty feeling, burning: can be from air-conditioning, screen time, or underlying dry eye disease, but Vitamin A is also important for the eye surface and cornea.
Blurry vision: very often due to refractive error (needs glasses), cataract, or blood sugar problems—so don’t assume it’s vitamins.
Central blur + colors looking “washed out”: a red flag pattern that deserves an eye exam to check the optic nerve (nutritional optic neuropathy is one possible cause, but not the most common).
Seek urgent care if you have sudden vision loss, severe eye pain, a “curtain” over vision, flashes/floaters that rapidly worsen, or one-sided weakness.
Vitamin A deficiency: the strongest link to night blindness and serious eye damage
Vitamin A is the nutrient most directly tied to vision. It helps your retina function in dim light by supporting rhodopsin, and it also protects the eye surface. When Vitamin A is very low, night blindness may be the first sign. In more severe deficiency, the cornea becomes abnormally dry (xerophthalmia), which can lead to corneal ulcers and permanent scarring.
This isn’t just a theory. The World Health Organization notes that an estimated 250,000–500,000 vitamin A–deficient children become blind every year, and half die within 12 months of losing their sight—showing how serious deficiency can be when it occurs.
Vitamin B-complex (especially B12): when the optic nerve may be involved
Vitamin B deficiencies are not the first cause people think of, but they matter—especially Vitamin B12. Low B12 has been linked to cases of nutritional optic neuropathy, where vision slowly worsens and central vision can be affected.
In some people with long-term smoking or heavy alcohol intake plus poor diet, doctors may also consider patterns described as tobacco-alcohol amblyopia, which overlaps with nutritional optic nerve damage. The key point is this: if blur is persistent, worsening, or paired with other symptoms like numbness/tingling or extreme fatigue, it’s worth getting checked properly.
Vitamin C, Vitamin E, and oxidative stress: supporting long-term eye protection
Your eyes are exposed to light and oxygen every day. Over time, oxidative stress and free radical damage can contribute to ageing-related eye changes, including cataracts. Vitamin C and Vitamin E are part of the body’s antioxidant defense, so low intake over long periods may reduce that protection. This doesn’t mean vitamins “cure” cataracts—but nutrition supports eye resilience.
Lutein and zeaxanthin: “macular health” nutrients many people miss
Lutein and zeaxanthin are carotenoids concentrated in the macula, the part of the retina responsible for sharp central vision. You’ll find them in leafy greens like malunggay leaves, kangkong, pechay, and also in egg yolks. They’re often described as “natural sunglasses” because they help filter certain light wavelengths and support macular health.
A careful note on Vitamin D and myopia progression (emerging evidence)
You may hear claims that Vitamin D affects “grades” in kids. Some research suggests an association between lower Vitamin D levels and myopia risk or eye growth patterns, but this area is still developing and does not prove Vitamin D alone causes myopia progression. Treat this as an “emerging link,” not a guaranteed cause.
How to Confirm if Deficiency is Affecting your Eyesight
The safest approach is to combine:
A full eye evaluation by an ophthalmologist (to rule out cataract, retina problems, glaucoma, diabetes-related eye disease, and optic nerve issues)
A guided nutrition assessment (often with a nutritionist-dietitian)
Target blood tests when appropriate (for example, B12 or Vitamin D, depending on symptoms and risk factors)


