Monocular Diplopia – Causes

Monocular diplopia (double vision in one eye only, persisting even when the other eye is closed or covered) is almost always caused by problems in the eye's optical system — specifically anything that distorts, scatters, or diffracts light before it reaches the retina in a single, clean focus.

It is usually benign (not dangerous to life or brain) and treatable — unlike binocular diplopia (double vision only when both eyes are open), which can signal serious neurological issues.

Main Causes

Key Diagnostic Clues

Most likely causes in practice:
1. Uncorrected astigmatism or refractive error
2. Dry eye / tear film instability
3. Cataract (especially nuclear or posterior subcapsular)
4. Keratoconus or corneal irregularity
5. Epiretinal membrane or macular disease (less common)

When to seek help

Monocular diplopia is rarely dangerous, but sudden onset, associated vision loss, pain, or new floaters/flashes warrant urgent ophthalmology evaluation to rule out retinal detachment, acute glaucoma, or other serious eye conditions.

If this is happening to you or someone you know, see an eye doctor (optometrist or ophthalmologist) — most causes are fixable with glasses, drops, or surgery.