That’s another viral “instant fix” claim that isn’t really accurate.
👓 Scratched glasses: the reality
Once lenses are scratched, the damage is usually physical removal or distortion of the coating/plastic, not just a surface stain. That means:
- You cannot truly “erase” scratches instantly at home
- Most “miracle fixes” only temporarily mask or blur them
- Some methods actually make lenses worse
⚠️ Common viral “remedies” (and what they really do)
1. Toothpaste / baking soda
- Slightly abrasive → can “polish” plastic very lightly
- ❌ Can worsen anti-reflective coatings
- ❌ Can make vision more hazy
2. Petroleum jelly (Vaseline)
- Fills in scratches temporarily
- ✔ Makes them less visible for a short time
- ❌ Wears off quickly, not a real repair
3. Glass polish / car wax
- Can reduce appearance of tiny surface marks
- ❌ Not safe for coated prescription lenses
🧠 The key truth
- Glass lenses: very hard to repair safely at home
- Plastic lenses: easier to mask, but not truly fix
- Coated lenses: most DIY methods can damage them permanently
💡 What actually works
- Replace lenses (most reliable option)
- Use warranty/insurance if available
- For minor scratches: optical shop polishing (limited effectiveness)
- Prevent future damage with a proper case + microfiber cloth
🚩 Bottom line
“Apply a little and they’ll disappear instantly” = marketing exaggeration
Real scratches don’t vanish—they can only be:
- temporarily hidden
- slightly reduced
- or properly fixed by replacement
If you want, tell me what kind of glasses you have (plastic, coated, prescription, sunglasses), and I can tell you what options are actually safe for your exact case.