Yes—you’re not imagining it. Many drivers feel that nighttime driving has become harder, and overly bright headlights are a big part of the problem.
🚗 Why headlights feel too powerful now
💡 1. Shift to LED and HID lights
Modern cars use LED or HID (xenon) headlights instead of older halogen bulbs.
- They are brighter and whiter (blue-tinted)
- This light scatters more in your eyes → causes glare
👁️ 2. Glare affects vision more than brightness
The issue isn’t just brightness—it’s glare, which relates to how light enters your eyes and reduces contrast.
This connects to a concept called Disability glare
👉 It temporarily reduces your ability to see objects clearly, especially in the dark.
🚙 3. Taller vehicles make it worse
SUVs and pickups have higher-mounted headlights, which shine directly into the eyes of drivers in smaller cars.
⚙️ 4. Misaligned headlights
Even normal lights become dangerous if:
- They’re aimed too high
- The car is overloaded in the back
🌧️ 5. Road and environment factors
- Wet roads reflect light
- Dust/fog increases scatter
- Poor street lighting makes contrast worse
😵 Effects on drivers
- Eye strain and fatigue
- Temporary blindness (a few seconds)
- Slower reaction time
- Increased accident risk
🛠️ What you can do
✅ While driving
- Look slightly to the left edge of the road, not directly at lights
- Use anti-glare (night driving) glasses if helpful
- Keep windshield clean (inside + outside)
🚘 For your own car
- Ensure headlights are properly aligned
- Use low beam in traffic
- Avoid illegal high-intensity bulbs
⚖️ Is it actually becoming a bigger issue?
Yes—globally, there’s growing concern and research about this. Regulations are still catching up with newer lighting technologies.
✔️ Bottom line
Driving isn’t necessarily becoming more complicated—but modern, brighter headlights (especially misused ones) are making nighttime driving more uncomfortable and sometimes less safe.
If you want, I can suggest specific anti-glare glasses or driving tips for Pakistani roads.