5 Mistakes Almost Every Rider Over 60 Makes With Night Riding — #3 Is Genuinely Shocking
If you've started dreading the ride home after sunset, you're not alone.
One oncoming SUV crests the hill, your visor lights up like a flashbang, and your eyes lock shut for a second. You grip the bars tighter. You promise yourself you'll leave earlier next time.
Most riders blame their age. Their eyes. Their helmet.
After 18 years as an optometrist, I can tell you almost all of them are wrong about what's actually causing the problem. And the way they're trying to fix it is making it worse.
Below are the 5 most common mistakes I see riders make. Read them in order. #3 is the one that catches almost everyone.
1. Assuming It's Your Eyes Getting Worse
This is where most riders start. The glare gets bad, the halos get worse, and the first thought is "I'm getting older. My vision is going. Maybe I need cataract surgery."
I see this in my clinic constantly. Riders come in convinced something is seriously wrong, and in the vast majority of cases the exam comes back completely clean. Healthy retina. Healthy optic nerve. No cataract. No macular issue.
The truth is harder to swallow: the headlights changed, not your eyes.
In 2018, about 55% of new cars on the road had LED headlights. By 2023, that number was closer to 75%. By the time you're reading this, almost every new vehicle you meet at night is throwing LED light at you. Your eyes haven't betrayed you. The traffic around you got dramatically brighter.
2. Buying $9.99 Yellow Glasses From Amazon or the Gas Station
This is the trap almost every rider falls into. You see a pair of yellow glasses for ten bucks, you figure "yellow is yellow," and you try them.
Two weeks later they're in a drawer. Or worse, your night visibility got dimmer and you felt less safe.
Here's what very few people in my field bother to explain. Those cheap yellow glasses were designed in the era of halogen headlights, which sit around 3000K on the color temperature spectrum (warm, yellowish-white light). Generic yellow lenses were tuned to soften that specific halogen wavelength.
But modern LED headlights sit at 4000K to 6500K. Cool, blue-white, with a shorter wavelength that scatters far more aggressively inside the eye. That scattering is what creates the halos, the starbursts, and the "flashbang" effect.
Trying to filter modern LED glare with a halogen-era lens is like trying to block out an alarm clock by turning down the volume on your TV. Wrong tool, wrong frequency.
3. Not Knowing There's a Lens Now Engineered Specifically for LED Spectrum
This is the part most of my patients don't know exists. And it's the reason I'm writing this article.
A small team finally took the LED problem seriously and built a riding lens from scratch, tuned to the exact 4000K to 6500K wavelength range that modern LED headlights produce.
Not generic yellow. Not the same lenses that have been on the market since the 1980s. A specific filter for the specific wavelength causing the problem.
The brand is HiLense Nighttime Riding Glasses, and they use what their team calls LED-Shield Technology. The harsh blue-white component of modern LED light gets filtered into a soft amber tone before it reaches the eye. Pupils stay relaxed. The road stays visible. The flashbang effect stops.
I personally tested them before I felt comfortable recommending them to my patients. The difference is genuinely noticeable, and I'm not someone who endorses products easily.
According to their internal data, 97% of verified buyers notice a difference on their very first night ride. That tracks with what I've heard from patients who've tried them.
4. Trying to "Tough It Out" and Just Riding Slower
A lot of riders compensate by squinting harder, slowing down, taking the long way home to avoid certain roads, or only riding before sunset.
This works, sort of. Until it doesn't.
The problem isn't just the visual discomfort. As an optometrist, I have to be honest about what's actually happening to your body during every glare event. Pupils constrict violently. Heart rate spikes. Shoulders tense. The body interprets sudden, intense light as a threat, and over a 30-minute commute that response is firing dozens of times.
I've had patients describe symptoms that sound like panic attacks: chest tightness, white-knuckle grip, shallow breathing, the urge to pull over. Some have actually started avoiding their evening shifts, their bridge nights, their visits to family, because the night ride home has become something they dread.
That's the quiet damage. You're not just enduring a visual annoyance. You're slowly killing the part of you that used to love riding at night. The fix isn't grit. The fix is the right lens.
5. Waiting For the Problem to "Go Away" or for Regulators to Fix It
This is the one I have to talk patients out of constantly.
I've had riders tell me they're just going to "wait it out" until the government does something. They've signed the petitions. They've seen the news segments. The IIHS has acknowledged the glare problem. Entire online communities are dedicated to it.
And nothing has meaningfully changed. Nothing is going to change soon.
Adaptive matrix headlights, the technology that would actually solve this problem at the source, have been legal in Europe for years. In the U.S., they were technically approved in 2022 but barely exist on the road because of how slow the testing and rollout process is. Realistically, you're looking at another 5 to 10 years before LED glare becomes meaningfully better through regulation alone.
In the meantime, every model year brings more LED-equipped SUVs and pickup trucks with headlights mounted at the exact eye level of a rider on a cruiser.
The riders who get their night confidence back are the ones who solve it themselves. Not the ones who wait.
If you recognized yourself in any of these 5 mistakes, here's what I'd recommend.
Try a pair of HiLense Nighttime Riding Glasses on your real night ride for 60 days. If the glare doesn't soften, if the halos don't disappear, if your shoulders don't drop on the ride home, send them back. No questions asked.
It's the lowest-risk way to find out if this is actually your fix.
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