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What Causes Eye Color to Change in Adults? 7 Real Reasons

What causes eye color to change in adults? It’s a question that surprises many people — most of us assume our eye color is fixed for life after childhood. And for the vast majority, it is. But for some adults, eye color does shift — sometimes subtly, sometimes significantly — and the reasons range from completely harmless to medically important.

This guide covers the seven real causes of eye color change in adults: which ones are normal, which ones require a doctor’s visit, and how to tell the difference.

Comparison of human eye color at different ages showing subtle change from blue-green to gray-blue in adults

Can Eye Color Actually Change in Adults?

The short answer is: yes, but rarely, and usually for a specific reason.

Most people stabilize their permanent eye color by around age 6. After that, the iris pigmentation typically stays consistent for life. However, a subgroup of 10–15% of Caucasian adults experience gradual, subtle shifts in eye color throughout adulthood — usually a slight lightening as they age. And in rarer cases, more significant color changes can occur as a result of medical conditions, medications, or trauma.

It’s also important to distinguish between eyes that actually change color (a real shift in iris pigmentation) and eyes that appear to change color (an optical effect caused by lighting, pupil size, or clothing). The latter is extremely common and completely normal. The former is rare and worth understanding.

7 Causes of Eye Color Change in Adults

1. Aging

The most common cause of genuine eye color change in adults is the natural aging process. As people get older, the melanin-producing cells in the iris (called melanocytes) can become less active. This gradual decrease in melanin causes eyes to lighten slowly over decades.

This lightening effect is most noticeable in people with naturally lighter eyes — blue, green, or hazel. Dark brown eyes rarely show visible change because the high melanin concentration provides a more stable base. The change is gradual enough that most people don’t notice it without comparing photos from 20 years apart.

Age-related lightening is harmless and requires no treatment.

Close-up of elderly person's eye showing age-related lightening of eye color due to reduced melanin production

2. Sun Exposure

Prolonged exposure to UV light can stimulate melanin production in the iris, causing eyes to gradually darken over years. This is the same mechanism by which skin tans in sunlight. The effect is subtle and typically only visible in people with light-colored eyes who spend significant time outdoors without UV protection.

Sun exposure can also cause “eye freckles” — small, flat brown spots called iris nevi that appear on the iris surface. These are generally harmless, similar to skin freckles, but should be monitored by an eye doctor since they can rarely develop into melanoma.

This is one reason why ophthalmologists recommend UV-protective sunglasses even on overcast days.

3. Glaucoma Medications

One of the most well-documented causes of permanent eye color change in adults is a class of glaucoma eye drops called prostaglandin analogs. These include latanoprost, bimatoprost, travoprost, and related medications.

These drops stimulate melanin production in the iris, causing gradual but permanent darkening — usually making light brown, green, or blue-green eyes turn darker brown over months to years of use. The effect is particularly noticeable when the medication is used in only one eye, resulting in visibly different eye colors between the two eyes.

This color change is a known, permanent side effect. If you’re prescribed these medications, your eye doctor should discuss this in advance. The color change itself is not dangerous, but it cannot be reversed if you stop the medication.

4. Eye Trauma or Injury

Physical injury to the eye — from blunt trauma, a penetrating wound, or a chemical burn — can permanently alter eye color by disrupting the iris tissue and its blood vessels. Two specific changes can occur:

  • Siderosis: Iron deposits from a retained metallic foreign body can stain the iris a reddish-brown color
  • Iris atrophy: The iris tissue can thin after trauma, causing the eye to appear lighter as more light reflects from the underlying layers

Any lasting color change after an eye injury requires prompt evaluation by an ophthalmologist, as it can indicate hidden complications like angle-recession glaucoma.

5. Medical Conditions

Several medical conditions can cause visible changes in eye color:

Fuchs Heterochromic Iridocyclitis (FHI): A chronic, low-grade inflammation of the iris that causes progressive loss of iris pigmentation. Over time, the affected eye becomes lighter. FHI can also cause cataracts and, if untreated, glaucoma. Symptoms are often subtle until advanced.

Pigment Dispersion Syndrome: A condition where pigment granules shed from the back of the iris and disperse into the eye, causing iris atrophy and potential lightening of eye color. Can lead to elevated eye pressure and glaucoma.

Horner’s Syndrome: Nerve damage (usually from stroke or injury) affecting one side of the face can cause iris depigmentation on the affected side, making one eye lighter than the other. Often accompanied by a drooping eyelid and smaller pupil.

Neurofibromatosis: This genetic condition causes Lisch nodules — small brown bumps on the iris surface — which can make the eye appear darker or speckled.

Eye Melanoma: A rare but serious condition where a tumor develops in the eye. Changes in iris color or appearance can be an early sign. Any unexplained darkening of one iris should be evaluated urgently.

6. Hormonal Changes

Some research suggests that hormonal shifts — particularly during puberty, pregnancy, or menopause — may influence iris pigmentation in some people. In one study, approximately 15% of Caucasian adolescents showed measurable lightening or darkening of eye color during puberty. The proposed mechanism involves sex hormones affecting the expression of melanin-related genes.

Hormonal eye color changes are typically subtle and gradual. Pregnancy-related changes, if they occur, usually normalize postpartum.

7. Optical Illusions (Not True Color Changes)

Many perceived eye color changes aren’t real changes at all — they’re optical effects that make the same iris appear different in different situations. These include:

  • Lighting: Different light sources (natural, fluorescent, warm indoor) dramatically affect how iris color appears. This is particularly pronounced in hazel eyes, which contain multiple tones that respond differently to light.
  • Pupil size: A dilated pupil covers more of the iris, changing the visible ratio of color zones. Emotions, dim light, and certain medications all cause pupil dilation.
  • Clothing and surroundings: Colors in the environment create contrast effects that make certain iris tones more prominent.
  • Crying: Crying causes redness in the sclera (white of the eye), which creates contrast that can make the iris color appear more vivid or slightly different.
Same eye in four different conditions showing how lighting, pupil size, and redness make eye color appear to change without actual pigment change

When Should You See a Doctor?

Not all eye color changes require medical attention — but some do. Here’s a practical guide:

See a doctor promptly if:

  • Only one eye changes color suddenly
  • The change is rapid (days or weeks, not years)
  • The change accompanies pain, vision changes, or light sensitivity
  • You notice a new dark spot or growth on the iris
  • The change follows an eye injury
  • One pupil appears different from the other

Monitoring is fine if:

  • The change is very gradual over many years
  • Both eyes are affected equally
  • You’re on prostaglandin glaucoma medication and your doctor has discussed this side effect
  • The “change” only happens in certain lighting and returns to normal otherwise

Eye Color Change vs. Apparent Color Change: How to Tell the Difference

The easiest test: photograph your eyes in consistent natural daylight at multiple points in time. Genuine color change will be visible in consistent lighting conditions comparing photos from different years. Apparent color change will look the same when photos are taken under identical conditions.

If you want to identify your current eye color accurately — including detecting subtle changes over time — an AI eye color identifier can analyze your iris at a pixel level and give you a precise color breakdown to compare against.

Eye Color Identifier App

Track Your Eye Color Over Time

Upload a photo and get a precise iris analysis — detect subtle changes, measure color percentages, and compare over time.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is it normal for eye color to change in adulthood?

Minor, gradual changes are normal in 10–15% of Caucasian adults, usually a slight lightening with age. Sudden, significant, or one-sided changes should be evaluated by an eye doctor as they can indicate medical conditions.

Can stress change your eye color?

Stress doesn’t directly change iris pigmentation. However, stress causes pupil dilation (through adrenaline), which changes the visible proportion of iris colors and can make eyes appear darker or more intense. This is an apparent change, not a real one.

Can diet affect eye color?

No credible scientific evidence supports the idea that specific foods can change iris pigmentation in adults. Claims about spinach, olive oil, or honey changing eye color are not supported by peer-reviewed research.

Do hazel eyes change color more than other eye colors?

Hazel eyes don’t change more — but they appear to change more, because their multi-toned iris responds more dramatically to different lighting and environments. The melanin doesn’t actually shift; the apparent color changes because different tones become more or less visible depending on conditions.

Can eye color change permanently from crying?

No. Crying causes temporary redness in the sclera which creates contrast that makes the iris appear more vivid. Once the redness fades, the eye color returns to its baseline. No permanent pigment change occurs.

What medications cause eye color to change?

The main documented medications are prostaglandin analog glaucoma drops (latanoprost, bimatoprost, travoprost). These can cause permanent darkening of the iris, especially in light-colored eyes. Some eyelash growth serums containing prostaglandins have also been reported to cause changes when they contact the eye directly.

Hazel Eyes: Color, Rarity, Meaning & Examples

Eye Color Guide

Hazel Eyes: Color, Rarity, Meaning & Examples

Hazel eyes are mixed eyes: green, brown, gold, and amber tones can appear in the same iris. Learn what hazel eyes look like, why they seem to change color, how rare they are, and how to tell hazel from green, brown, or amber eyes.

Hazel eyes are one of the hardest eye colors to label because they are rarely one clean shade. In daylight they may look green and gold. Indoors they may look brown. In a close-up photo, you may see several colors layered together.

The simplest definition is this: hazel eyes contain a visible mix of brown and green, often with gold or amber flecks. If one color fully dominates with very little variation, the eyes may be better described as brown, green, amber, gray, or blue instead.

Hazel eyes color guide showing a mixed iris with green, brown, gold and amber tones

What Color Are Hazel Eyes?

Hazel eyes are usually a blend of green, brown, gold, and amber. The exact mix can vary from person to person. Some hazel eyes look mostly brown with green around the edge. Others look mostly green with brown or gold near the pupil.

That mixed structure is what makes hazel different from a single-color eye. Brown eyes are usually more uniform. Green eyes are usually more consistently green. Amber eyes are usually more solid gold or copper. Hazel sits between those categories.

Quick rule: if you see both green and brown in the same iris, with gold or amber tones mixed in, hazel is probably the closest everyday label.

Types of Hazel Eyes

There is no single official hazel eye type chart, but most hazel eyes fall into a few practical shade families. These labels are useful when you are comparing your eye color in photos or using an eye color test.

Types of hazel eyes chart showing brown-dominant, green-dominant, golden hazel and blue-gray hazel examples
Hazel type What it looks like Common search
Brown-dominant hazel Mostly brown, but green, gold, or amber appears in parts of the iris. brown hazel eyes
Green-dominant hazel Mostly green, but with brown or amber flecks near the pupil or across the iris. green hazel eyes
Golden hazel Warm honey, gold, and amber tones, usually with some brown or green mixed in. gold hazel eyes
Blue-gray hazel A cooler outer iris with warmer brown, gold, or green tones toward the center. blue hazel eyes

Hazel vs Green, Brown, and Amber Eyes

The line between hazel and nearby eye colors can be blurry. The best way to tell is to look at the whole iris in indirect daylight and ask whether the color is uniform or mixed.

Hazel vs green brown and amber eyes comparison chart
Hazel vs greenGreen eyes are usually more uniform. Hazel eyes include visible brown, gold, or amber mixed with green.
Hazel vs brownBrown eyes are usually mostly brown. Hazel eyes show green or gold areas that stand out in daylight.
Hazel vs amberAmber eyes are more solid gold or copper. Hazel eyes are more blended and usually include green or brown.
Hazel vs central heterochromiaHazel is blended. Central heterochromia has a clearer ring around the pupil.

Why Do Hazel Eyes Change Color?

Hazel eyes do not usually change pigment from day to day. They appear to change because lighting, pupil size, clothing, and background colors make different tones in the iris stand out.

In warm indoor light, brown and amber can look stronger. In indirect daylight, green and gold may be easier to see. In low light, the pupil expands and covers more of the iris, often making hazel eyes look darker.

Hazel eyes lighting comparison showing warm indoor light, indirect daylight and low light effects

Are Hazel Eyes Rare?

Hazel eyes are uncommon globally, but exact numbers vary by country, ancestry, and how eye colors are classified. Many broad eye color charts place hazel and amber in the smaller percentage groups compared with brown and blue.

Hazel eyes are more common in some populations with European, Middle Eastern, North African, or mixed ancestry. They are less common worldwide than brown eyes, which are the most common eye color overall.

Because hazel is a mixed category, rarity estimates should be treated as rough guides. Some charts group hazel with amber or light brown, while others separate them.

What Causes Hazel Eyes?

Eye color depends mainly on the amount and distribution of melanin in the iris, plus the way light scatters through the iris structure. Brown eyes generally have more melanin, while blue and gray eyes have less visible front-layer pigment.

Hazel eyes usually sit in the middle: enough melanin to create brown and amber tones, but not so much that the whole iris appears uniformly dark brown. Uneven melanin distribution can create green, gold, brown, and amber areas in the same iris.

Eye color inheritance is complex. It is influenced by multiple genes, so it is not as simple as one parent color plus another parent color. That is why siblings can have different eye colors, including hazel appearing in a family where eye colors vary widely.

How to Tell If Your Eyes Are Hazel

Use a close-up eye photo in indirect daylight. Turn off flash, avoid filters, and crop close to the iris. Then look for these signs:

  • Brown and green are both visible in the same iris.
  • Gold or amber flecks appear near the pupil or across the iris.
  • Your eyes look greener in daylight and browner indoors.
  • Different people describe your eye color differently.
  • The color is mixed rather than one flat shade.

If you still cannot tell, compare your photo with an eye color chart or use an eye color test that can look at the iris more closely.

Related Eye Color Guides

Use these next if you want to compare hazel with nearby colors and mixed patterns.

Find Your Exact Hazel Shade

Hazel eyes can be hard to name because they are mixed. The Eye Color Identifier app analyzes a close-up iris photo and describes your dominant color, secondary tones, and patterns.

Download Free on App Store

Free to download · iOS · No login required

Hazel Eyes FAQ

What color are hazel eyes?

Hazel eyes are a mix of brown, green, gold, and amber tones. The exact balance can be different for every person.

Are hazel eyes green or brown?

They can be both. Hazel eyes usually contain brown and green in the same iris, often with gold or amber tones mixed in.

Are hazel eyes rare?

Hazel eyes are uncommon globally, though exact percentages vary depending on the population and how eye colors are grouped.

Why do hazel eyes look different in different lighting?

Lighting, pupil size, camera exposure, clothing, and nearby colors can make green, brown, gold, or amber tones stand out more strongly.

What is the difference between hazel and central heterochromia?

Hazel eyes usually have blended colors across the iris. Central heterochromia usually has a clearer ring of one color around the pupil with another color outside it.

Can hazel eyes change color permanently?

Subtle eye color shifts can happen with age, but sudden or one-sided eye color changes should be checked by an eye care specialist.

Sources and Further Reading

What Color Are My Eyes? The Complete Guide to Identifying Your Eye Color

You’ve stared into the mirror a hundred times, and you still can’t quite decide: what color are my eyes, exactly? Are they green or hazel? Blue or gray? The answer is often more nuanced than you’d expect — and more interesting than you might think.

This guide covers everything you need to know about eye color: what determines it, how to identify your exact shade, why your eyes might seem to change color, and how to get a precise answer using today’s AI technology.

Human eye iris close-up showing brown green and amber pigmentation patterns

What Determines Your Eye Color?

Eye color comes down to one key factor: melanin. This is the same pigment that determines your skin and hair color. The more melanin you have in the front layer of your iris (called the stroma), the darker your eyes will be.

More melanin = brown or dark eyes. Less melanin = blue, gray, or green eyes.

The science gets more complex from there. Multiple genes control melanin production, which is why two blue-eyed parents can sometimes have a brown-eyed child, and why no two people — not even identical twins — have exactly the same eye color.

Your iris also has two layers, each capable of containing different amounts of pigment. This is why some people see multiple colors in their eyes simultaneously — patches of brown near the pupil surrounded by green or gray toward the outer edge. That specific pattern is called central heterochromia, and it’s more common than most people realize.

The 7 Main Eye Colors Explained

Eye color chart showing the 7 main human eye colors: brown, blue, green, hazel, gray, amber, and black

Brown Eyes

The most common eye color worldwide, found in 70–80% of the global population. Brown eyes contain high levels of melanin in the front iris layer. Shades range from light honey-brown to nearly black. Most common in Africa, Asia, and South America.

Blue Eyes

Found in 8–10% of people, predominantly in Northern Europe. Blue eyes have very little melanin in the front of the iris — the blue color comes from light scattering (the same phenomenon that makes the sky look blue). Interestingly, all blue-eyed people share a common ancestor who developed a single genetic mutation thousands of years ago.

Green Eyes

The rarest of the common eye colors, found in only 2% of the world’s population. Green eyes result from a combination of low melanin and a yellow pigment called lipochrome. Most prevalent in Northern and Central Europe.

Hazel Eyes

Hazel eyes contain a mix of brown, green, and gold throughout the iris, often appearing to shift color depending on lighting and clothing. About 5% of people have hazel eyes. They’re most common in the Middle East, North Africa, and Brazil.

Gray Eyes

Often confused with blue or blue-green, gray eyes have very little melanin. The gray color comes from light interacting with collagen fibers in the iris stroma. True gray eyes are relatively rare and are most common in Northern and Eastern Europe.

Amber Eyes

A solid golden or copper color, without the green and brown flecks typical of hazel eyes. Amber eyes result from a high concentration of melanin combined with a yellow pigment in the front iris layer. Found in about 5% of people, most commonly in Pakistan, France, Italy, and Hungary.

Black Eyes

What appears as black is actually an extremely dark shade of brown with such high melanin concentration that the iris is nearly indistinguishable from the pupil. True black eyes are rare; most very dark eyes are deep brown.

Why Do My Eyes Seem to Change Color?

If you’ve noticed your eyes looking different depending on the day, you’re not imagining it. Several factors can make eye color appear to shift:

  • Lighting: Natural daylight reveals your true eye color most accurately. Artificial lighting — especially fluorescent or warm indoor light — can distort perceived color significantly.
  • Clothing: The colors you wear reflect onto your iris, subtly influencing how your eye color appears to others.
  • Pupil size: When your pupils dilate (in low light or emotional arousal), they cover more of the iris, making your eyes appear darker overall.
  • Emotions: Strong emotions can cause pupil dilation, which affects perceived eye color.
  • Age: Eye color can change naturally, especially in early childhood (many babies are born with blue eyes that darken in the first year) and in older adults.
Same eye photographed in different lighting showing how eye color appears to change from green to hazel to brown

How to Determine Your Eye Color Accurately

Getting a definitive answer to “what color are my eyes?” is harder than it sounds. Here are the most reliable methods, from least to most accurate:

Method 1: Natural Light Check

Stand near a window in natural daylight (not direct sunlight). Look straight into a mirror. Natural light gives you the most neutral, accurate view of your iris without the distortion of artificial lighting.

Method 2: Eye Color Chart

Compare your iris to a standardized eye color chart. This works reasonably well for common colors like brown or blue, but struggles with complex shades like hazel-green or blue-gray where the difference is subtle.

Method 3: Photo Analysis

Take a close-up photo of your eye in natural light. Zoom in and compare to reference images. This method helps you see details — like secondary color rings or pigment flecks — that you might miss in a mirror.

Method 4: AI Eye Color Identifier App

The most accurate and detailed option available today. An AI-powered app analyzes your iris at a pixel level, detecting not just the dominant color but secondary tones, pigment distribution, and rare patterns like heterochromia. You get results in seconds, with a full breakdown of your iris composition.

Eye Color Rarity: How Common Is Yours?

Curious how rare your eye color is? Here’s a breakdown of global eye color distribution:

  • Brown: 70–80% of the world population
  • Blue: 8–10%
  • Hazel/Amber: 5% each
  • Green: 2%
  • Gray: 1–2%
  • Heterochromia (two different colors): Less than 1%

So if you have green eyes, you’re in a rare 2% of the global population. Gray eyes are even rarer. And heterochromia — where each eye is a different color — is among the rarest traits in humans.

Can Eye Color Change After Birth?

Yes — but usually only in specific circumstances:

In infancy: Most babies in Northern European families are born with blue or gray eyes. As melanin production increases in the first year of life, many of these eyes darken to brown, hazel, or green. Eye color typically stabilizes by age 3.

With age: Some adults experience gradual lightening or darkening of eye color as melanin distribution changes. This is usually subtle and happens over years.

With medication or illness: Certain glaucoma medications, Horner syndrome, and other conditions can alter eye color. If you notice a sudden, unexplained change in your eye color, consult an eye doctor.

What Your Eye Color Might Say About Your Health

Eye color isn’t just cosmetic — researchers have identified several connections between iris pigmentation and health factors:

  • Brown eyes may be associated with a slightly higher risk of cataracts.
  • Blue eyes are linked to higher light sensitivity due to lower melanin (less natural UV protection in the iris).
  • Light eyes may carry a slightly higher risk of age-related macular degeneration.
  • Dark eyes provide more natural protection against UV-related eye damage.

None of these associations mean you need to take action — they’re statistical trends, not individual diagnoses. Regular eye exams matter far more than your eye color for maintaining eye health.

Find Out Your Exact Eye Color with AI

Eye Color Identifier app showing AI iris analysis with color breakdown results on iPhone screen

The fastest and most precise way to answer “what color are my eyes?” is to use an AI eye color identifier. Instead of guessing from a chart or squinting in a mirror, you simply take a photo of your eye and let the app analyze your iris in detail.

The Eye Color Identifier app does exactly this — and goes further. It detects your primary eye color, secondary tones, iris pattern structure, and even gives you a rarity score showing how your eye color compares to the global population. You can also try virtual contact lens colors on your own photo to see how different shades would look on you.

Eye Color Identifier App

Finally Know Your Exact Eye Color

Upload a photo and get a full iris analysis in seconds — color, rarity score, celebrity match, and more.

Download on App Store

Free · iOS · No login required

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the rarest eye color?

True green eyes are among the rarest, found in only about 2% of people. Gray eyes are similarly rare. The absolute rarest condition is heterochromia — having two different eye colors — which affects less than 1% of the population.

Can two brown-eyed parents have a blue-eyed child?

Yes. Because multiple genes control eye color, two brown-eyed parents who both carry recessive blue-eye genes can produce a blue-eyed child. Eye color inheritance is more complex than the simple dominant/recessive model most people learned in school.

Why do my eyes look different in photos than in the mirror?

Camera flash, lighting conditions, and the direction of light all affect how eye color appears in photos. For the most accurate color, photograph your eye in natural daylight without flash.

Can eye color change with mood or emotions?

Not directly. Strong emotions like excitement or sadness cause the pupils to dilate, which makes the iris appear smaller and can make your eye color look slightly darker or more saturated. The pigment itself doesn’t change.

What’s the difference between hazel and green eyes?

Green eyes are a solid, uniform green color with little variation. Hazel eyes contain a mixture of green, brown, and gold with visible flecks — and often appear to shift color in different lighting. If your eyes look brown near the pupil and green toward the edge, you likely have hazel eyes.

How accurate are AI eye color identifier apps?

Modern AI apps analyze iris pigmentation at a pixel level, making them significantly more accurate than visual comparison methods. They can detect secondary tones and subtle variations that are nearly impossible to identify with the naked eye.