Migliaccio & Rathod LLP is investigating whether Felix Gray blue-light glasses are marketed with eye strain, focus, sleep, or screen-protection claims that may overstate the benefits consumers receive.
What Consumers Report
Consumers report purchasing Felix Gray blue-light glasses based on marketing emphasizing:
- Blue-light filtering.
- Reduced eye strain.
- Better focus during screen use.
- Sleep support.
- Doctor-endorsed or science-based benefits.
- Protection from harmful blue light.
Consumers may pay premium prices because they believe Felix Gray blue-light glasses provide meaningful benefits for computer work, headaches, or sleep quality.
Why Consumers Should Be Concerned
Consumers often buy blue-light glasses because they spend long hours using screens. If marketing creates the impression that the glasses provide clinically proven relief from digital eye strain or sleep disruption, but the evidence does not support those benefits, consumers may have overpaid.
Potential claims may include:
- False advertising
- Unsupported health-related claims
- Price-premium injury
- Consumer protection violations
Signs You May Be Affected
- You purchased Felix Gray blue-light glasses.
- You relied on claims about eye strain, focus, sleep, or harmful blue light.
- You paid a premium because of those representations.
- The glasses did not provide the benefits you expected.
If you have encountered these issues, we would like to hear from you. Please complete the contact form on this page, send us an email at [email protected], or give us a call at (202) 470-3520.
