Tritanomaly
Reduced sensitivity to blue light; rare.
What Tritanomaly means
Tritanomaly weakens the blue-sensitive (S) cones. Blues and greens can look alike, and yellow can appear washed out or pinkish. Unlike red-green deficiency it is not sex-linked, so it affects men and women about equally.
What it can look like day to day
- Blue and green are easy to confuse
- Yellow and pink can look similar
- Purple may appear more like deep red
- Pale colours look faded
How common is it?
Very rare (affects men and women equally). Colour vision deficiency overall affects roughly 1 in 12 men and 1 in 200 women, see the full prevalence breakdown.
Can glasses help?
Most colour-blind glasses target red-green deficiency, so they generally do not help tritanomaly. See do colour blind glasses work?
How to test for Tritanomaly
Start with the free online color blind test or the blue-yellow test. For a diagnosis, an eye-care professional uses calibrated plates, an anomaloscope or an arrangement test. Want to see the difference? Try the colour blindness simulator.