If you have amblyopia in one eye and normal vision in the other eye, you can get a driver’s license. When there is no obvious organic lesion in the eye, and the best corrected visual acuity of one or both eyes is lower than the corresponding age visual acuity, it is called amblyopia, or the visual acuity of both eyes differs by 2 lines or more, and the eye with the lower visual acuity is amblyopic. It is an eye disease closely related to visual development and manifests as a developmental visual system presenting with varying degrees of vision loss, usually with monocular involvement. Amblyopia is usually asymptomatic and is found during the examination of monocular vision, unlike myopic hyperopia, which cannot be corrected to normal vision with nearsighted, farsighted, or astigmatic lenses and mainly affects central vision, with peripheral vision usually normal. Because the “motor vehicle driving license application and use of regulations”: monocular visual impairment, the naked vision or corrected vision of the superior eye to logarithmic visual acuity table 5.0 or more, and the horizontal field of view of 150 degrees, you can apply for a motor vehicle driving license for small cars, small automatic cars and other types of motor vehicles. However, for large passenger cars and trucks, you must be normal in both eyes to get a driver’s license. Therefore, monocular amblyopia can take the motor vehicle driving license for small cars and small automatic cars, but not for large buses and trucks.