Smooth pursuit eye movements provide an ideal model of sensorimotor integration with visual motion area V5 being a key candidate integrating visual motion processing with oculomotor control. We applied personalized transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) explicitly targeting individual V5 to induce subtle impairment or facilitation of sensorimotor integration during pursuit and assess the gain by personalized, compared to conventional normative tDCS. Pursuit initiation was specifically delayed during personalized cathodal tDCS targeting right V5 pointing towards the involvement of specific functional subareas of V5. The results were well-controlled by anodal and sham tDCS, different pursuit tasks, and by two control experiments, one that applied personalized tDCS targeting FEF and another that applied normative tDCS over V5, for all of which no pursuit modulation was observed. Importantly, in contrast to normative tDCS, personalized tDCS effectively modulated pursuit by adapting electric fields to individual anatomical and neurophysiological V5 properties, yielding interesting potential for the improved effectiveness of personalized tDCS in general.