BACKGROUND Due to theoretical considerations an increase in the depth of field of the diffractive IOL may be combined with a reduction in contrast sensitivity, glare sensitivity and colour perception. METHODS A comparative analysis of both eyes was performed in ten patients with a diffractive multifocal IOL (3M 815LE) in one eye and a monofocal IOL in the other eye. Contrast sensitivity was examined by computer generated sine wave gratings of 6 different spatial frequencies; visual acuity with glare and glare sensitivity were determined under 7 different levels of field luminance; colour vision was examined using the Farnsworth-Munsell-100-Hue-test. RESULTS Contrast sensitivity of the diffractive lens was reduced for intermediate spatial frequencies, but not for low and high frequencies. Visual acuity with glare was only reduced at maximum field luminance; no differences were found in glare sensitivity and colour perception between monofocal and multifocal. CONCLUSIONS Altogether, the diffractive lens did not show a dramatic reduction in the examined visual functions compared with the monofocal IOL.