COASION Kids Polarized Sunglasses Review: 3-Pack Worth It?

COASION Kids Polarized Sunglasses Set TPEE Rubber Flexible Shades for Girls Boys Age 3-9 Sunglasses 3 Pack (Purple + Rosepink + Applegreen)
COASION
- Product Dimension - Lens Width: 45mm, Frame Height: 40mm, Nose Bridge: 12mm, Frame Width: 122mm, Temple Length: 121mm
- TAC Polarized Lens: UVA and UVB ultra violet blocking lenses with added polarization can eliminate glare while maintaining color integrity
- UV400 Protection: Offering beyond 99% UVA-UVB protection, protect your child's eyes against harmful sun rays, reducing eye strain, and minimizing the risk of eye damage
- Ultra Flexible Materials: With our revolutionary soft and bendable TPEE materials, our sunglasses frames minimize the problem of breakage, give your children a comfortable yet safe wearing experience
Quick Verdict
Pros
- TPEE rubber frames flex without snapping — ideal for clumsy little hands
- UV400 protection blocks over 99% of UVA and UVB rays
- Polarized TAC lenses cut glare while preserving colour integrity
- 3-pack gives you backups without buying separately
- Lightweight at 122mm frame width — stays put on active kids
- Anti-skid nose pads help the glasses stay on during play
Cons
- Only one lens size (45mm) — may not fit kids at the extremes of the 3-9 range
- Plastic hinges feel slightly soft under repeated open/close cycles
- No hard case included — only a soft pouch
Quick Verdict
The COASION kids polarized sunglasses 3-pack earns its recommendation for one simple reason: it solves the replacement problem that every parent of young kids already knows is coming. With UV400 protection, TAC polarized lenses and flexible TPEE rubber frames, you get solid optical performance in a set built to absorb the kind of punishment a 4-year-old dishes out daily. At the time of this review, it sits comfortably above 4 stars across verified buyers — and my own two-week test backs that up. Score: 4.2/5
What Are the COASION Kids Polarized Sunglasses?
The COASION set delivers three pairs of small square-frame kids sunglasses in a coordinating colourway: purple, rose pink and apple green. Each pair uses TAC (Tri Acetate Cellulose) polarized lenses with a UV400 rating — meaning they block more than 99% of UVA and UVB radiation. The frames are made from TPEE rubber, a flexible elastomer that bends under pressure and snaps back rather than cracking. The dimensions are modest (45mm lens width, 122mm frame width) — designed for children roughly aged 3 to 9, with a lightweight build that doesn't slide down small noses during active play.

Key Features
- TAC polarized lenses eliminate glare from water, sand and roads
- UV400 protection blocks over 99% of harmful UVA and UVB rays
- TPEE rubber frames flex on impact and return to shape
- Anti-skid nose pads help glasses stay in position during movement
- Weighs approximately 18-20 g — light enough for all-day wear
- Three colour options in one set — purple, rose pink, apple green
- Suitable for ages 3-9; fits both boys and girls
Hands-On Review
I first picked these up at a rest stop two hours into a road trip, thrown into a nappy bag alongside half a sandwich and a sippy cup. By the time we reached the beach house, the rose pink pair had been chewed on, dropped on tile and retrieved from under a car seat. The TPEE frames had picked up a fine layer of sand in the hinges. No cracks. No warping. That was the first thing that impressed me — not the optics, but the build honesty.

On the actual beach, the polarized lenses showed their worth. My daughter (6) kept them on voluntarily — which never happens with her previous pair, which she described as "squishy and annoying." The COASION frames sit closer to the face without pressing, and the anti-skid nose pads did their job through an hour of sand-castle construction and two accidental face-plants into a wave. Colour integrity held up well; the sea looked blue rather than washed-out grey, which suggests the polarisation is doing real work rather than just adding a tint.
The 45mm lens width is genuinely small. On my daughter it sits fine. On her 8-year-old cousin with a slightly broader face, the temples started to pinch after 45 minutes. The Apple Green pair ended up on him by day two, and the Purple pair migrated to his younger sister (4) who needed the arms slightly adjusted — not broken, just bent gently inward — to stop them sliding off. The flexibility of the TPEE material made that adjustment trivial. I shouldn't have been surprised, but I was a little.
After two weeks, the lenses have minor surface marks from sand encounters that a case would have prevented. The hinges are intact. The anti-skid texture on the nose pads is still grippy. For a set that retails well under $30 for three pairs, that's a perfectly acceptable outcome.
Who Should Buy It?
Parents of toddlers and early primary-school kids who treat sunglasses like chew toys will get the most value here. The flexibility of the TPEE frames genuinely reduces breakages, and having three pairs means you can keep one in the nappy bag, one in the car and one at home without worrying about the daily loss that seems inevitable with this age group. The UV400 protection is solid enough for everyday outdoor use — beach days, park visits, cycling and school runs.
Skip this set if your child is older than 9 or has a notably wider face — the 122mm frame width will feel tight. Also skip it if you're after certified impact-resistant sunglasses for skateboarding, rollerblading or other high-velocity activities; these are built for comfort and optical protection, not ANSI-rated impact resistance.
Alternatives Worth Considering
Real Shades Kids Polarized Sunglasses — if you prioritise a named brand with a stronger track record in children's eyewear. Real Shades tends to offer more frame-size options, including toddler-specific narrow fits, but you'll typically pay 30-40% more per pair.
Babiators Polarized Ocean Collection — a strong option if you want a replacement guarantee (Babiators replaces lost or broken pairs for free within a year). The optical quality is comparable, but Babiators comes in at a higher price point and doesn't offer multi-packs.
Ilovpo Kids Polarized Sunglasses 2-Pack — worth considering if you want fewer pairs at a lower price. The frame materials and UV ratings are similar, but the TPEE flexibility and colour range on the COASION set give it a slight edge for younger children.
FAQ
Yes. They use TAC (Tri Acetate Cellulose) polarized lenses that block reflected glare from water, sand and roads while maintaining colour fidelity. UV400 rating adds over 99% UVA/UVB protection on top.
Final Verdict
After two weeks of beach sand, car floors, small hands and one very determined dog, the COASION kids polarized sunglasses 3-pack held up exactly as the marketing promises. The UV400 and polarisation credentials are legitimate, the TPEE frames flex in ways that would shatter standard plastic, and three pairs for one reasonable price removes the anxiety of inevitable loss. The only meaningful trade-off is the single small frame size — which rules out older or broader-faced kids. For ages 3-7, this set is easy to recommend.