👁 Accessibility Tool

Colour Blindness Simulator

Free colour blindness simulator, color blindness filter online and color vision deficiency simulator for designers and developers. Use as a color blind test image tool and accessible design checker. Upload any image and preview it through 8 types of colour vision deficiency - Protanopia, Deuteranopia, Tritanopia, Achromatopsia and more. Use the severity slider to simulate partial colour blindness at any level. Export all 8 simulations as a single comparison image. A protanopia deuteranopia tritanopia image simulator and colorblind friendly design checker, with client-side processing - your images never leave your browser.

8 CVD types Severity slider Export comparison Client-side only Drag & drop
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Colour Blindness Simulator

Preview Any Image Through 8 Types of Colour Vision Deficiency

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Drop an image here or click to upload
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP. Processed locally - never sent to a server.
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Upload an image above to see how it looks with different types of colour vision deficiency.
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Check colour contrast too
Use the free WCAG Contrast Checker to verify your text and background colour combinations meet WCAG AA and AAA contrast ratio requirements.
Contrast Checker →
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Key features

Everything the Colour Blindness Simulator Does

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8 CVD Types Simulated
Protanopia, Deuteranopia, Tritanopia, Achromatopsia (monochromacy), Protanomaly, Deuteranomaly, Tritanomaly and Achromatomaly - all 8 major types of colour vision deficiency shown simultaneously.
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Severity Slider
Adjust simulation severity from 0% (normal vision) to 100% (complete deficiency). Simulates partial CVD at any level - unique among free tools. Useful for simulating anomalous trichromacy conditions.
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Side-by-Side Grid
All 8 CVD simulations shown simultaneously in a grid alongside the original image. Instantly see which colour combinations cause problems for colour blind users.
Export All 8 Views
Download all 8 simulations stitched into one comparison image. Share with clients or include in accessibility audit reports. Exported as a single PNG.
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100% Client-Side
All image processing runs in your browser using the HTML Canvas API. Your images are never uploaded to any server. Works offline after the page loads. No account or login required.
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Drag & Drop Upload
Drag and drop any image file onto the upload zone, or click to browse. Supports JPG, PNG, GIF and WebP formats. No file size restrictions beyond your browser's memory.
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Based on Research Matrices
Uses the Machado, Oliveira and Fernandes (2009) colour transformation matrices, derived from cone spectral sensitivity functions. Scientifically grounded simulation, not approximate colour swaps.
WCAG Accessibility Testing
Identifies whether your design communicates information through colour alone. WCAG 2.1 SC 1.4.1 requires that colour is not the sole visual means of conveying information.
Instant Processing
Simulations render immediately on upload. Severity changes update all 8 views in real time as you drag the slider.
How to use

How to Use the Colour Blindness Simulator

1
Upload your image
Drag and drop any image file onto the upload zone, or click Choose Image to browse. Works with screenshots, design mockups, charts, infographics, logos and photographs. Supports JPG, PNG, GIF and WebP.
2
See all 8 CVD simulations at once
The grid immediately shows your image as it would appear to people with each of the 8 types of colour vision deficiency: Protanopia, Deuteranopia, Tritanopia, Achromatopsia, Protanomaly, Deuteranomaly, Tritanomaly and Achromatomaly.
3
Adjust the severity slider
Drag the Severity slider from 0% (normal vision) to 100% (complete deficiency). All 8 simulations update in real time. Use values between 30-80% to simulate anomalous trichromacy - partial colour vision deficiencies that are actually more common than complete deficiencies.
4
Identify accessibility problems
Look for areas where important information becomes unreadable or indistinguishable. Pay particular attention to red-green combinations (Protanopia and Deuteranopia views) as these affect the largest group of colour blind users.
5
Export the comparison image
Click Export All Views to download all 8 simulations stitched into one comparison PNG. Include it in accessibility audit reports, share it with clients to explain colour blindness issues, or use it in design reviews.
6
Fix and re-test
After updating your design to use patterns, labels or icons in addition to colour, upload the revised image and re-run the simulation to confirm the information is now accessible to colour blind users.
Competitor comparison

Colour Blindness Simulator: LazyTools vs Competitors

Most free online colour blindness simulators show only the most common 3-4 types without a severity slider. The severity slider - simulating partial CVD - is the key differentiator absent on free tools.

FeatureLazyToolscolor-blindness.compilestone.comtoptal.com/designers
CVD types simulated8 types8 types4 types6 types
Severity / partial CVD sliderYes (0-100%)NoNoNo
All views simultaneouslyYes (grid)YesOne at a timeOne at a time
Export all viewsYes (one PNG)NoNoNo
Image stays in browserYes (100%)YesServer uploadYes
Research-based matricesMachado 2009YesApproximateYes
No login requiredYesYesYesYes
CVD guide

Types of Colour Vision Deficiency

Colour vision deficiency (CVD) affects the ability to distinguish certain colours. It is caused by the absence or malfunction of one or more types of cone cells in the retina. There are three types of cones, sensitive to long (L/red), medium (M/green), and short (S/blue) wavelengths of light.

CVD TypeAffected conePrevalence (men)What is confused
ProtanopiaL (red) absent~1%Red and green; red appears dark/black
ProtanomalyL (red) weak~1%Red and green (milder); poor red sensitivity
DeuteranopiaM (green) absent~1%Red and green; greens look washed out
DeuteranomalyM (green) weak~5%Red and green (milder); most common CVD
TritanopiaS (blue) absent<0.01%Blue and green; yellow and red
TritanomalyS (blue) weak<0.01%Blue and green (milder)
AchromatopsiaAll cones absent<0.003%All colour; sees only grey
AchromatomalyAll cones weakRareReduced colour discrimination overall

How do colour blind people see my design?

The most common question designers ask is how colour blind people see their work. For red-green colour blindness (affecting roughly 8% of men), the primary issue is distinguishing red from green. Traffic lights, error and success states, data charts using red and green, and form validation feedback are all common problem areas. This colour blindness simulator for images online free shows exactly what your design looks like through each type of CVD, so you can identify and fix these issues before publishing.

Protanopia and deuteranopia simulator: the red-green gap

The protanopia and deuteranopia simulator views are the most important for most web designers. Together, protanopia and deuteranopia (and their milder variants) affect approximately 8% of men. Both conditions cause red-green confusion, but in different ways: protanopia results in reduced sensitivity to red wavelengths, making reds appear darker or even black. Deuteranopia affects green sensitivity, making greens look more greyish. Both conditions make it impossible to distinguish red from green at similar brightness levels.

Tritanopia simulator: the blue-yellow issue

The tritanopia simulator shows how people with blue-yellow colour blindness see your design. Tritanopia is much rarer than red-green CVD (affecting fewer than 1 in 10,000 people) but unlike red-green CVD, it affects men and women equally. People with tritanopia have difficulty distinguishing blue from green and yellow from red. Blue warning colours on yellow backgrounds and cyan-on-blue combinations are common problem areas.

Achromatopsia simulator: designing for complete colour blindness

The achromatopsia simulator (complete colour blindness) shows your design in pure greyscale. While achromatopsia is extremely rare (approximately 1 in 30,000), designing well for achromatopsia means designing well for all colour blind users: if your design is comprehensible in greyscale, all colour information has been supplemented with shape, pattern, label or position cues that work for everyone. The greyscale view is also useful for checking the luminance contrast of your design elements.

Web accessibility color test free: WCAG 1.4.1

WCAG 2.1 Success Criterion 1.4.1 (Use of Colour, Level A) states that colour must not be the only visual means of conveying information, indicating an action, prompting a response, or distinguishing a visual element. This means form fields cannot show validation state through red/green colouring alone - they need an icon, text label or border style change in addition. Data charts cannot use only colour to distinguish data series - they need patterns, labels or shapes. This colour blindness simulator is a practical web accessibility color test free tool to identify these WCAG failures before they reach production.

CVD design review tool: practical recommendations

After running your design through this CVD design review tool, the standard fixes for colour blindness accessibility are: add icons or symbols alongside colour-coded states (a checkmark for success, an X for error); use patterns in addition to colours in charts and graphs; ensure sufficient luminance contrast between foreground and background elements (check with the WCAG Contrast Checker); avoid relying on red-green combinations for important state changes; and use colour-blind-safe palettes (such as the Okabe-Ito palette) for data visualisation.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Colour vision deficiency (CVD) is an inability or reduced ability to distinguish certain colours. It affects approximately 8% of men and 0.5% of women. The most common types are red-green CVD (protanopia, deuteranopia). Blue-yellow CVD (tritanopia) is rarer. Complete colour blindness (achromatopsia) is very rare, affecting 1 in 30,000.
Protanopia is red-green colour blindness caused by absence of red (long-wavelength) cones. Affects approximately 1% of men. Red colours appear dark or black. Protanomaly is the milder partial version with reduced red cone sensitivity.
Deuteranopia is the most common form of red-green CVD, affecting approximately 5% of men. Caused by absence of green (medium-wavelength) cones. Greens appear washed out, and red-green discrimination is lost. Deuteranomaly (partial version) is the single most common CVD type overall.
Tritanopia is blue-yellow colour blindness caused by absent or malfunctioning blue (short-wavelength) cones. Affects fewer than 1 in 10,000 people, and unlike red-green CVD, affects men and women equally. Blue and green become confused, as do yellow and red.
Achromatopsia (total colour blindness) means seeing everything in shades of grey due to complete absence of functioning cone cells. Extremely rare (1 in 30,000). Also causes poor visual acuity and light sensitivity (photophobia).
The simulator applies Machado-Oliveira-Fernandes (2009) colour transformation matrices to each pixel of your image using the HTML Canvas API. The severity slider interpolates between original and simulated colours. All processing runs in your browser - your images are never uploaded to any server.
Approximately 1 in 12 men have some form of CVD. WCAG 2.1 SC 1.4.1 requires colour not be the sole means of conveying information. Designs using only red/green for error/success states, or colour-only chart legends, will fail for colour blind users. This simulator identifies these issues before publishing.
The severity slider simulates partial CVD at any level from 0% (normal) to 100% (complete deficiency). Many people have partial anomalous trichromacy - their cones work but with reduced sensitivity. Setting severity to 30-70% simulates these intermediate conditions, which are actually more common than complete deficiencies. This feature is absent on most free colour blindness simulators.
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