You’ve seen the stamp. It’s usually tucked away on the inside of the temple arm or etched into the corner of the lens: Z87.
In the world of industrial safety, those three characters are often treated as a "pass/fail" grade. If it says Z87, you’re good to go, right? Not exactly. While that mark confirms the eyewear meets the base safety standards set by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), the letters and symbols that follow it are what actually determine if you’re protected from a flying metal shard or just a stray splash of cleaning fluid.
It’s time to stop treating your safety gear like a "one size fits all" solution. Let’s decode the 2020 update to the ANSI/ISEA Z87.1 standard so you can ensure your eyewear actually matches your environment.
The most critical distinction in the Z87.1-2020 standard is how the eyewear handles a hit. If your job involves grinding, chipping, or power tools, the "+" is your best friend.
If you work in a chemical plant or a woodworking shop, impact isn't your only enemy. The 2020 standard uses "D" markings to identify eyewear designed for specific environmental hazards.
| Marking | Hazard Protection | Design Requirement |
| D3 | Splash & Droplet | Tight seal around the eyes; tested with liquid spray |
| D4 | Dust | Protects against large airborne particles |
| D5 | Fine Dust | Protects against particles smaller than 5 microns |
Pro-Tip: If you see a "D3" mark, those glasses or goggles are chemically resistant. If you’re working with hazardous liquids and your glasses don’t have a D3, you’re essentially wearing a screen door against a rainstorm.
The Z87.1-2020 standard also covers how lenses filter light. You’ll often see these marks followed by a number (like U6 or L3) to indicate the level of protection.
The 2020 revision wasn't just a "copy-paste" of the 2015 version. It placed a heavier emphasis on Anti-Fog (Marked with an "X") and Relaxed Optics.
In the modern manufacturing environment, fogging is one of the leading reasons workers remove their safety glasses - usually at exactly the wrong time. Anti-fog safety eyewear undergoes rigorous testing, primarily under European standard DIN EN 168, which requires lenses to remain fog-free for at least 8 seconds in a controlled, warm, and humid environment, often marked with an "N" - meaning the lens has passed the mandatory anti-fog tests, or "X" - often used in conjunction with premium coatings like Bolle's 'Platinum®' coating to indicate superior, long-lasting anti-fog properties that often exceed standard requirements. If your lenses are treated with a permanent anti-fog coating that meets the new rigorous testing, you’ll see the "X" mark.
Before you start your next shift, perform this quick audit on your eyewear:
Safety eyewear is a piece of technology, not just a piece of plastic. By knowing how to read the markings, you aren’t just following a mandate - you’re ensuring you go home with the same number of eyes you started with.
goSafe offers a wide variety of Safety Eyewear; we also operate an onsite Customization Department that can customize many styles of eyewear with your company logo. goSafe maintains a constant, ready-to-ship supply of FR Clothing and Safety Footwear, and also partners with Bollé Safety in their Seamless Vision Prescription Safety Eyewear Program. For more information on these products and services or any of our other safety and PPE products, please contact us at sales@gosafe.com.
At goSafe, Safety is our ONLY focus - and we'll partner with you to keep you and your teams safe. We're small enough to handle your local projects, yet large enough to serve national accounts. If safety is your mission, it starts with us.
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