Color Blindness Simulator

Visualize how your colors appear to people with different types of color vision deficiency

Select Color

HEX

#ffc0cb

Pink

Blindness Simulator

Check how a color is perceived by people with different types of color blindness to create more accessible designs. Understanding color perception helps ensure your content is accessible to everyone.

Impact

8% of men and 0.5% of women have some form of color vision deficiency.

Types

Red-green blindness is most common, affecting how reds and greens are perceived.

Design Better

Use contrast and patterns alongside color to convey information.

Original Color

#ffc0cb

Pink

This is how the color appears with normal color vision.

Red-Green Blindness (Protanopia)

Protanopia

1.3% of men, 0.02% of women

90%

How it appears

#e7e6c8

Protanomaly

1.3% of men, 0.02% of women

94% SIMILAR
Original
#ffc0cb
Simulated
#f5d8ca

Red-Green Partial (Deuteranopia)

Deuteranopia

1.2% of men, 0.01% of women

89%

How it appears

#eaeec8

Deuteranomaly

5% of men, 0.35% of women

95% SIMILAR
Original
#ffc0cb
Simulated
#f4d3c9

Blue-Yellow Blindness (Tritanopia)

Tritanopia

0.001% of men, 0.03% of women

98%

How it appears

#fcc6c6

Tritanomaly

0.0001% of the population

99% SIMILAR
Original
#ffc0cb
Simulated
#fdc3c9

Complete Color Blindness

Achromatopsia

0.003% of the population

89%

How it appears

#d0d0d0

Achromatomaly

0.001% of the population

91% SIMILAR
Original
#ffc0cb
Simulated
#dbcdcf

Note: These simulations are approximations. Actual color perception may vary between individuals with the same type of color blindness.

Understanding Color Blindness

Create inclusive designs by testing color accessibility

Color blindness affects approximately 1 in 12 men and 1 in 200 women worldwide. This simulator helps designers, developers, and content creators understand how their color choices appear to people with various forms of color vision deficiency.

By testing your colors through different color blindness simulations, you can ensure your designs are accessible and effective for all users. This tool simulates the most common types of color vision deficiency including Protanopia, Deuteranopia, Tritanopia, and complete color blindness.

Why It Matters

Color alone should never be the only way to convey information. Testing with this simulator helps identify potential issues.

Use Cases

Perfect for UI design, data visualization, branding, and any visual content that relies on color differentiation.