The light changes.
Your vision shouldn’t.
A non-polarized dégradé driving lens, engineered in Antwerp: darker where the sun lives, clear where your dashboard does.
Shop DriveVision® Watch the film ↗Drag. See the difference.
Left: the road as your eyes fight it. Right: the road through DriveVision®.

Why drivers swear by it.

Amber or Sienna.
Same engineering. Two temperaments.
Amber
Warm, high-contrast, alive. The classic golden-hour lens — it makes dull light interesting.
Sienna
Deeper, calmer, understated. For those who prefer their advantage kept quiet.
Never squint
at the road again.
DriveVision® — in the webshop now.
Shop DriveVision®Driving questions, answered
What are the best sunglasses for driving?
A good driving lens cuts glare and lifts contrast without distorting colour. DriveVision uses amber and sienna graduated tints — darker at the top against the bright sky, lighter at the bottom so your dashboard stays visible. The lenses are deliberately non-polarized, so dashboard and GPS screens remain readable. CR-39 lenses with full UV400 protection.
Why amber lenses for driving?
Amber lifts contrast in changing and low light — mist, cloud and dusk — by calming scattered light, so the road reads more sharply in less-than-ideal conditions. The DriveVision Amber transmits 42% of light (category 2), the lightest tint in the range. For full sun, the Sienna transmits 32% (category 3).
Can the DriveVision Amber be used for night driving?
Yes — the Amber is also made for evening and night driving. Its warm amber tint calms the harsh glare of oncoming headlights and the reflections off a wet road, while lifting contrast so the road, kerbs and markings read more clearly in mist, rain and low light. Where bright lights would otherwise dazzle, the view stays calmer and easier on the eyes.
Are polarized lenses good for driving?
Polarization removes reflections from a wet road, but it can also darken LCD dashboards and GPS screens. That is why DriveVision is non-polarized — contrast and comfort while keeping your screens readable. For water and snow, where polarization matters most, see the Azur Polarized range.
What lens category is DriveVision?
The Amber is category 2 (42% light transmission) for low light and dusk; the Sienna is category 3 (32%) for full sun. Both are CR-39 lenses with UV400 protection.
