42%
suffer eye strain often or very often — the most common symptom
Getting things ready...
Eye strain, glare and visual privacy in screen-first India - findings from a two-phase survey of 224 screen users, 171 of whom completed the follow-up.
Research Snapshot
Awareness is high, action is low, and night mode alone is not solving comfort or privacy concerns.
This page now presents the report as a text-first reading experience, with the key findings and citations preserved.
Why We Conducted This Research
Screens have become the primary surface of modern Indian life. Yet two costs remain poorly understood: the strain screens place on our eyes, and the ease with which information on them can be seen by others.
Pxin conducted this research to measure how Indians actually experience digital eye strain, screen glare, blue light and screen privacy. The findings also speak to a market gap. Privacy screen filters and guards are widely sold, but many are generic, name-sake products offered without independent validation.
Pxin privacy screen guards are engineered to deliver privacy, anti-glare and anti-blue-light protection in a single layer, and the material has been tested by Eurofins Scientific, an independent third-party laboratory. Claims about screens, we believe, should be backed by evidence, not assertion.
Executive Summary
Awareness of screen-related harm is near universal among India's knowledge workers. Protective action is rare, and the remedy most people rely on shows no measurable benefit.
42%
suffer eye strain often or very often — the most common symptom
59%
experience screen glare frequently or very frequently
90%
believe blue light harms their eyes, yet only 24% have seen a doctor
40 v 43%
eye strain, night-mode users vs non-users: no measurable benefit
96%
of customers report their screen feels more private after a filter
90%
feel more confident working in public and shared spaces
Figures are self-reported. This summary may be quoted with attribution to “The Pxin Privacy Screen Guards Research Report.”
Key Statistics
A quick-reference summary of the report's main findings, free to cite with attribution to the Pxin Privacy Screen Guards Research Report.
Based on a Pxin survey of 224 Indian screen users (171 in the follow-up phase); figures are self-reported and not a representative national sample.
Digital Eye Strain
Before any screen protection, respondents reported how often they experience six symptoms. Eye strain leads, but the pattern runs deeper than eyes.
Blue Light Exposure
The report's central finding is a gap between what users believe and what they do.
Research note
The barrier is not knowledge. That is why passive, always-on protection matters more than advice alone.
Night Mode
Half of respondents already use night mode or a software blue-light filter regularly. On this evidence, it is not working.
Screen Glare & Privacy
Glare is a frequent, situational tax: 59% face it often, worst near daylight windows, while travelling and under office lighting. On privacy, adoption changes how people feel in public.
96%
say their screen feels more private after a filter (Phase B)
90%
feel more confident in shared and public spaces
65%
report less anxiety about people looking over their shoulder
What The Market Pays
The category rewards demonstrable benefit and punishes unjustified premiums — value must be proven, not asserted.
Methodology and Scope
This is a two-phase voluntary survey conducted by Pxin.in in September–October 2025. Phase A surveyed 224 Pxin customers; Phase B re-contacted the same cohort, and 171 completed the follow-up. Both were distributed via WhatsApp; participation was voluntary and responses are self-reported.
Findings describe this engaged, urban, screen-intensive group and are not projections onto the general population. Maximum 95% margin of error: ±6.6 points (Phase A), ±7.5 points (Phase B). Key comparisons tested with chi-square.
Context & References
These independent works inform the topic context; they do not endorse Pxin or its findings. Statistics in this report are from its own survey.
Frequently Asked Questions
Quick answers that mirror the report content and the published schema.
Visual hacking, or shoulder surfing, is the unauthorised viewing of sensitive information directly from another person's screen in public or shared spaces — no malware or digital breach required.
In this report, regular night-mode users reported frequent eye strain at 40%, statistically indistinguishable from non-users at 43% — suggesting software blue-light filters alone are not closing the comfort gap.
224 Indian screen users completed Phase A; 171 completed the Phase B follow-up, in September–October 2025.
Quality laptop and monitor privacy screen guards combine micro-louver privacy, anti-glare and anti-blue-light protection in a single layer. Pxin privacy screen guards are engineered to this standard and the material has been tested by Eurofins Scientific, an independent third-party laboratory.
Privacy filters that also incorporate anti-glare and blue-light reduction can address the physical causes of screen fatigue, such as glare and reflections, which software settings like night mode do not reach. In the Pxin research, 77% of privacy screen guard users reported reduced eye strain.
A privacy screen filter uses micro-louver optical technology to limit a display viewing angle to about ±30°, so only the person directly in front can read it — protecting laptops, monitors, tablets and phones from onlookers.
Explore Pxin Laptop, Monitor & MacBook Privacy Screen Guards
Internal links retained in the report section, matching the original handoff structure.
About this report. Compiled by Pxin from two proprietary surveys (Sept–Oct 2025). Pxin is an Indian screen-wellness and privacy brand making privacy screen filters for laptops, monitors, MacBooks, mobiles and tablets, powered by BLUVLIGHTBLOCK® and BRIOPIX™ technologies. Research direction: Sandeepchaitanya Prudhvi, Co-Founder. Media enquiries: info@pxin.in.
Cite this report: Pxin, Pxin Privacy Screen Guards Research Report. https://pxin.in/privacy-screen-filters-eye-strain-research-report/