Close-Up Lens Diopter Calculator

Find magnification and focus distance for close-up filters

Compute the magnification ratio and new minimum focus distance when adding a close-up diopter filter to a lens. Supports stacking multiple diopters and varying the base lens focus distance for macro and close-up photography planning. It runs free in your browser on Gera Tools, with nothing uploaded.

Last updated Source: Gera Tools

How does a close-up diopter add magnification?

A close-up filter is a positive lens with a focal length in millimetres equal to 1000 divided by its diopter power. Placed in front of the main lens it lets the camera focus much closer, and the magnification gained at infinity focus equals the lens focal length times the diopter power divided by 1000.

Close-up diopter filters are the cheapest route into macro: they screw onto the front of any lens and pull its focus range dramatically closer. This calculator tells you exactly what magnification and working distances you will get for any lens and diopter strength, including stacked filters.

How it works

A close-up filter is simply a weak positive lens. Its own focal length in millimetres is:

diopter focal length = 1000 ÷ diopter power

So a +4 filter has a 250 mm focal length, and a +10 filter has a 100 mm focal length.

Working distance. When the camera lens is set to infinity, the in-focus subject sits exactly at the diopter’s focal length in front of the filter. That is the far focus limit. As you rack the lens to its own minimum focus, the subject moves closer — the near limit. The near distance is:

near = 1000 ÷ (diopter power + 1000 ÷ lens MFD)

where lens MFD is the bare lens minimum focus distance.

Magnification gained. With the lens focused at infinity, the added magnification is:

extra magnification = (lens focal length × diopter power) ÷ 1000

A 100 mm lens with a +4 filter gains 100 × 4 ÷ 1000 = 0.4× extra. Combined with whatever the bare lens already does at close focus, this can push a normal lens well into macro territory.

Stacking diopters

Diopter powers add. A +2 plus a +4 behaves as a single +6. Mount the strongest element nearest the camera and expect softer corners as power rises — single achromatic doublets handle stacking far better than cheap singlets.

Notes and tips

  • No light loss. Unlike extension tubes, diopters do not extend the flange distance, so your exposure does not change.
  • Depth of field shrinks fast at high magnification — stop down and use focus stacking for usable sharpness front to back.
  • Front element size matters. Match the filter thread to your lens, or use a step ring.

All calculations run locally in your browser.