






🌙 Drive Confidently After Dark with LUFF’s HD Clip-Ons!
LUFF Clip On Night Driving Glasses feature true HD polarized yellow resin lenses that significantly reduce glare from LED headlights and reflections, enhancing night and low-light driving safety. With UV400 protection, a soft silicone-padded metal clip, and compatibility for most prescription glasses under 58mm lens width, these lightweight clip-ons boost contrast in adverse weather while protecting your eyewear. Included accessories like a storage box and cleaning cloth make them a practical, stylish upgrade for any night driver.














| ASIN | B0C81NSF4P |
| ASIN | B0DNTS21GG |
| Age Range Description | Adult |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,088,158 in Clothing, Shoes & Jewelry ( See Top 100 in Clothing, Shoes & Jewelry ) #5,039 in Men's Sunglasses |
| Brand | LUFF |
| Color | Yellow |
| Customer Reviews | 3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars (1,045) |
| Date First Available | November 22, 2024 |
| Frame Material Type | Metal |
| Item Shape | Rectangular |
| Lens Coating Description | UV Protection Coating |
| Lens Color | 60*41mm |
| Lens Material Type | Resin |
| Lens Type | Polarized |
| Manufacturer | LUFF |
| Polarization Type | Polarized |
| Sport Type | Fishing |
| Style Name | Classic |
| Sunglasses Form | clip_on |
| Ultraviolet Light Protection | true |
J**A
Great for driving at night
I’ve struggled with night driving for years, but these clip-on glasses have completely changed that. Once I clip them onto my prescription glasses, everything looks sharp and clear, without the glare and strain I used to deal with. They’re lightweight, easy to use, and very inexpensive compared to other options. I finally feel comfortable and confident driving at night again, which is something I hadn’t been able to do for a long time. Highly recommend!
C**Y
Perfect for conversion to Magnet Clip ons
When I got my last pair of glasses the optician offered polarized Clip ons that attach with magnets. They were $150 a piece and I had money back then and bought a black one and a yellow one for night driving. These were so great and easy that I can not live without them. Fast forward to now…. I needed new glasses, the magnet option was not offered and I do not want to spend the money to buy new ones. So I DIYed them for me. I needed to drill holes into my expensive glasses and I had no idea if this would work without destroying them so I used my old glasses to test the drilling. Here is what you need: - Rotary tool like a Dremel. I had this and it worked great: TACKLIFE Cordless Rotary Tool - https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B075N68KRZ It had all the bits I needed to drill and its easier to use than a huge dremel. - LUFF Polarized Clip on Sunglasses in brown and yellow. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07GLC9LC8 I picked those because the clip spring can be easily removed so only the bridge is left. - Magnets. Small thin ones. I used 4mm x 1mm round magnets. You can find those on Amazon too. - And last (Optional) UV glue. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B06XJ28LZP To seal the holes and cover the magnets. Plus if you buy just the glue you need a UV lamp to set the glue or you buy a kit with a UV LED like Bondic. This stuff is so useful for all kinds of things. Step 1: You remove the spring and the parts that press the clip on to your glasses. I just used some pliers. Only the bridge will be left. Step 2: You hold the Clip ons onto your glasses and see if they are bigger and mark the overhanging parts with a sharpie. Then you trim/sand away all those parts. The rotary tool has the right attachment for that. You do not have to but it made them more custom. Maybe buy 2 pairs and practice on one first. Now you have a customized pair of Clip ons that fit your glasses perfectly. Step 3: Mark (carefully) the position you want the magnets to be. As close to the left and right edge as possible but not too close that you can break the lens. That is the frightening part. You use the rotary tool to drill a very small hole and then use that hole and the cone shaped bit to make it bigger. Do this very slowly. You do not want to melt the lens or have it get too hot. Just do it in steps and remove all the debris every time you stop. Try if the magnet fits and if not then continue. But DO NOT drill bigger than the magnet. So go slowly until the magnet fits and you can press it into the hole and it is stuck. No glue needed. Step 4: Seal the back of the glasses with the UV glue. Fill the hole up and harden it. This way no dirt can catch in there and it makes it a little nicer. But you do not have to. **That was the delicate part. If this goes wrong you have ruined (maybe) an expensive pair of glasses so think twice before you do this and practice on an old pair or buy a cheap pair or used pair to practice and see how this works.** Step 5: Do the same with your Clip ons. If you ruin those, you just buy another pair. Not expensive and try again. Make sure to insert the magnets so that they attract each other. But if not, pop them out and turn them around. No big deal. Step 6: Magnets are brittle. I have noticed that after some use they flake off and you will get dark grey magnet dust around your magnets and they can even break. You click magnet to magnet over and over again. To prevent that I coat the Clip on inserted magnets with the UV glue. At least the parts that touch each other. Coat ONLY the magnet in the Clip on not the magnet in the glasses. If you coat both, you will loose too much strength of the magnets, plus it looks better without the glue on your glasses. It works great and gives a soft buffer. Plus. I have noticed you can use this to color the outside part of the magnet. A silver disk sticks out visually on black Clip ons. So I painted them with a sharpie (yellow for yellow and black for brown and black Clip ons) and put a drop of UV glue on top. It looks shiny and full black after you do that. Then Harden the glue. Done. I have done this 5 times by now. I have 2 pairs of progressive glasses in two very different shapes and created a black and orange clip on for the big glasses and brown, black and yellow for the smaller ones. I put magnets on my sun visor in my car. Metal would work too - Just less strong. So now the Clip ons are attached to the visor when I do not use them and with one move they go from the visor to my glasses while I drive. If the magnets ever break… No problem. Since they are hopefully not glued in (and you were careful while you drilled so you did not have to use glue to keep them in there) you can just pop them out and put new ones in. The professional Clip ons: The magnets are smaller and are inserted on the front and do not go all the way through. The lenses are better quality and really custom to your glasses. You have to send in your glasses for them to do this. So yes... if you have the money do that, but for $150 (4 years ago) a piece... My solution is cheaper with the same function. $15 Clip ons, $8 magnets, The rotary tool I had but it was $19 and the glue I had too but it was $10 for (no name refill or $22 for the Bondic kit. The original Bondic lasted me for several years Best part is you can layer them. You know the time of the day when the sun is so low - below your visor - and you are driving towards the sun and can not see a thing. If you have two of those Clip ons. Like a black and brown one. They stick to each other. I put one on top of the other. The magnets work that way. I can see and they are easily removed while driving once the sun is below the horizon.
M**A
Reduces headlight glare at night.
They made an obvious difference in cutting glare of headlights from oncoming traffic. They are supposed to be polarized but I can see my head up display and infotainment screen without problem, so I question if they are actually polarized. My only real complaint is that the lever to open the clip is ridiculously tiny for the amount of spring tension making it hard to open the clip. Update: I increased my review to 4 stars because the company reached out to me and offered a full refund which I thought was great customer service. The glasses work fine it's just that tiny lever that makes them hard to install.
S**S
Not designed for double-bridge frames...
... information would have helped before purchase. Had to return. Basically blue light filtering lenses with a tiny bit of polarization, not enough to reduce glare of bright led headlights or refraction from scratches. Otherwise seem well made. But now I know why these haven't generally been adopted for night driving... don't really work. My glasses had anti-scratch and anti-glare coatings, but all worn off. Only real fix will be new glasses.
B**O
Provides clarity during low-light situations such as night, snow, fog, and gloomy days
These clip-ons provide clarity during low-light situations such as night, snow, fog, and gloomy days. The difference is incredible. Well-made, comes with case and microfiber cloth for cleaning. Gets a rare 5 stars from me.
A**R
The Yellow lenses are NOT polarized.
What I expected based on description: yellow, polarized, anti-reflective clip-ons. What I received: unpolarized, reflective clip-ons. I have previously used four polarized lenses. All removed the same glare from windshields, windows, and lake water. One black, two brown, and one yellow. These clip-ons do not remove any glare. There is no change in the glare between my prescriptions and adding these yellows. I can quite literally hold my other polarized clip-ons in front of these and see the glare instantly disappear............ The images provided by the seller where the fish image is changed when viewing through the lense is a total slight of hand. Remember when theatres had red/blue glasses for viewing 3-D films? Same concept here. The lense draws out or masks certain colors...........but this is not due to any sort of polarization. The yellows should be considered as a standard plastic yellow lense. It works great for enhancing the visual spectrum during low light conditions. These are simply NOT daytime, anti-reflective, polarized clip-ons.
W**A
Feels like weak polarization
Yes, they fit, they are yellow, and technically polarized (somewhat)... The problem is the polarization is very weak, not like a polarized camera filter. I tested it with the usual method of rotating the clipons with a polarized filter behind, and the effect was minimal. With two fully polarized lenses placed against each other, they block the light when one is rotated 90 degrees to the other. With these, I could see a slight effect, but not much at all. I wanted these to block reflections on the windshield while driving, and these do not do that much at all.
J**T
Its a very affordable product for people with prescription glasses. It provides best functionality as required. Not recommended for people who like fancy glasses as it works well.
K**O
Muy práctico, le queda a todo tipo de lentes trae su estuche y una micro fibra, se ve de buena calidad.
R**B
These clip-ons are easy to put on and stay in place on my glasses. They are a little on the thin side and are frameless which makes them delicate. You may want to keep them in the included case for protection. I found that they do help me to cut down on the glare from oncoming cars, and street lights while driving at night.
F**T
bien
C**X
I bought these for my Dad for Christmas because he does some highway driving at night. He was very excited after wearing them for the first time, because of the improvement he found in his night vision. I'm thinking of getting a pair for myself!
Trustpilot
4 days ago
1 week ago