Smart Glasses Release Calendar 2026: Every Launch Confirmed and Rumored


For most of the past decade, smart glasses were a curiosity — a prototype shown at developer conferences, a product that perpetually arrived "next year." That changed in 2025 when global shipments of display-less smart glasses surged 167% year over year, and the category became the fastest-growing segment in all of consumer electronics. Now, in the second half of 2026, every major platform holder is either shipping hardware or weeks away from a launch event. If you have been waiting to understand what smart glasses actually are before committing your money, the waiting period just ended — and the decisions ahead are more complex than simply picking a brand.

Woman in business attire adjusting black-frame smart glasses outdoors illustrating the everyday wearable design driving 2026 smart glasses adoption.

Smart glasses in 2026 bifurcate into three distinct hardware architectures: camera-equipped audio-first devices exemplified by Meta Ray-Ban and Samsung Galaxy Glasses, camera-free directional audio devices prioritizing workplace compliance and translation accuracy, and full optical see-through AR platforms such as Snap Specs and Xreal Aura delivering spatial computing through waveguide or birdbath display optics.

This guide consolidates every confirmed date, credible leak, and rumored timeline into a single resource — then gives you a framework for deciding whether to buy now, wait for a specific launch, or skip 2026 entirely.

Three Hardware Categories, Not One: Reading This Calendar Correctly

Most release-calendar articles stack products by brand and date. That approach obscures a more important distinction: the three product categories shipping in 2026 serve fundamentally different use cases, carry different regulatory constraints, and occupy different price tiers. Understanding these categories before scanning the timeline prevents expensive mismatches between what you need and what you buy.

Audio-only AI glasses contain speakers, microphones, and typically a camera, but no in-lens display. The value proposition centers on hands-free AI assistance, phone call routing, music playback, and — in camera-equipped versions — photo and video capture. Weight typically falls between 35 and 50 grams, battery life ranges from 6 to 48 hours depending on use case and design philosophy, and pricing sits between $199 and $500. Meta Ray-Ban, Samsung Galaxy Glasses, and several independent brands occupy this tier.

HUD notification glasses add a small waveguide or micro-LED display that projects text — notifications, navigation cues, teleprompter scripts, translations — into the wearer's peripheral vision. Even Realities G1 and G2 are the most established products here. Weight hovers around 35 to 40 grams, and the display is monochromatic or low-color, designed for glanceable information rather than immersive content. Pricing starts around $599.

Full AR see-through glasses layer rich, multi-color digital content onto the real world through advanced optical systems. Snap Specs ($2,195) and Xreal Aura (under $1,500) represent the first consumer-grade entries in this category in 2026. Weight jumps to 95–136 grams, battery life drops to 3–4 hours, and these are not all-day wearables — they are spatial computing devices you put on for focused sessions.

A buyer who wants translation support during international business meetings has no reason to wait for Snap Specs. A developer building spatial AR applications has no reason to buy Ray-Ban Meta. The calendar below is organized chronologically, but the category each product belongs to determines whether it is relevant to you.

Already Shipping: The June 2026 Baseline

Before examining what launches next, it helps to anchor on what you can buy today. The current market is not empty — it already includes several mature products across all three categories.

Standard audio-first smart glasses typically feature two to four microphones with environmental noise cancellation rated for 65 to 85 decibels of ambient rejection. Selecting devices equipped with multi-microphone beamforming arrays prevents transcription errors and voice command failures during commutes, conference halls, or outdoor travel.

Meta Ray-Ban Gen 2 ($299–$499) remains the volume leader. EssilorLuxottica reported selling over 7 million Meta AI glasses in 2025 alone, and IDC data puts Meta's share of the overall smart glasses market at 69.2% in Q1 2026. The Gen 2 offers a 12MP camera, open-ear speakers, Meta AI with multimodal vision capabilities, and 4–6 hours of mixed-use battery. Available in Wayfarer, Headliner, and Skyler frame styles with prescription lens compatibility.

Black Wayfarer-style Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses with visible camera lens illustrating Meta's volume-leading Gen 2 AI glasses lineup

Meta Glasses launched June 23, 2026, at a $299 starting price — the lowest entry point in Meta's AI glasses portfolio. Built with EssilorLuxottica in three frame styles (Adventurer, Fury, and a Kylie Jenner collaboration), these ship with Meta AI powered by Muse Spark from day one, prescription lens compatibility via the new Rx Lens Swap system, and over 8 hours of stated battery life. Twenty-six style configurations are available at launch.

Even Realities G1 and G2 ($599+) occupy the HUD notification tier. The G1 uses a monochromatic green micro-LED waveguide display for notifications, navigation, translation (13 languages), and a voice-synced teleprompter. No camera, no speakers — these are designed to be socially invisible. The G2 expanded to a broader feature set. Prescription compatibility is built-in.

Black rectangular-frame glasses with compact temple electronics module illustrating Even Realities' camera-free HUD notification design

Solos AirGo 3 integrates ChatGPT via a companion app, offering AI-powered Q&A through open-ear speakers. Camera-free, focused on voice interaction and audio.

Gray rectangular-frame glasses with accent-striped temples illustrating Solos AirGo 3's camera-free, voice-driven AI audio design

Dymesty AI Glasses ($199–$299) run a camera-free, titanium-frame design at 35 grams with four microphones, Bluetooth 5.3, aptX support, and 48 hours of stated battery life. The V2.0 software update (May 2026) added AI recording with full-text editing and keyword search, auto-language-detection translation across 100+ languages, a schedule assistant syncing Google Calendar and Outlook, and an intelligent assistant with voice input. The camera-free architecture positions these for compliance-sensitive environments — offices, courtrooms, classrooms — where camera-equipped glasses face institutional restrictions.

Black titanium-frame glasses with branded temple panel illustrating Dymesty's camera-free AI glasses for compliance-sensitive workplaces

For those evaluating the most innovative smart glasses companies in 2026, the independent brand tier is growing faster than most coverage suggests. IDC's "Others" category — comprising brands outside the top five — collectively accounts for 19.8% of global shipments, a share expected to rise as new entrants arrive.

Q3 2026: Samsung Galaxy Glasses and the Android XR Ecosystem

Samsung Galaxy Smart Glasses rendering with in-lens navigation map and video call display illustrating the Android XR and Gemini AI ecosystem launch

The largest structural shift on the 2026 calendar is not a single product but a platform: Android XR. Google's strategy mirrors its smartphone playbook — build the operating system, then let hardware partners compete on design and distribution. Samsung is the anchor partner.

Samsung Galaxy Glasses are expected to be officially revealed at Galaxy Unpacked in London on July 22, 2026. The glasses, codenamed Jinju, are reportedly built on the Android XR platform with Gemini AI integration. Leaked specifications describe a 12MP Sony IMX681 camera, directional speakers and microphones, Bluetooth 5.3, photochromic transition lenses, and a frame weighing approximately 50 grams. No in-lens display — this is an audio-first AI device. Pricing is rumored around $379–$499, positioning Samsung directly against Meta's Ray-Ban Gen 2 lineup. Consumer availability is expected in Q3 2026.

Gentle Monster and Warby Parker Android XR Glasses were previewed at Google I/O on May 19, 2026. Samsung and Google formally showed the first two frame designs from these eyewear partners: a bold, elongated oval from Gentle Monster and a classic rounded-square silhouette from Warby Parker. Both are audio-first glasses with cameras, speakers, and Gemini integration, designed as companion devices for smartphones. Notably, they will support both Android and iOS. Audio-only models launch "this fall," with display-equipped versions following later. No pricing has been confirmed.

Google's role is platform provider, not hardware manufacturer. The company demonstrated first-party glasses prototypes at MWC in March 2026 but has not committed to shipping a Google-branded consumer product. The strategy bet: if Android XR gains the same developer ecosystem advantage that Android holds in smartphones, the platform matters more than any individual device.

Xreal Aura is the first see-through AR glasses running Android XR, targeting a Fall 2026 launch at no more than $1,500. The split-compute design places a Snapdragon Reality Elite processor in a tethered pocket puck while the glasses themselves weigh under 95 grams and deliver a 70-degree optical field of view through birdbath optics. Three onboard cameras enable hand tracking, spatial awareness, and photo/video capture. Reservations opened in June 2026, with 2,000 Founder Pass units selling out in 36 hours. Xreal Aura does not compete with Samsung Galaxy Glasses or Ray-Ban Meta — it occupies a different category entirely, closer to a spatial computing headset compressed into a glasses form factor.

Q3–Q4 2026: Meta's Multi-Product Offensive

Meta is not standing still while competitors assemble. Reports indicate the company plans to release as many as four new smart glasses models throughout 2026. The Meta Glasses launch in June was one; the remaining announcements are expected at and around Meta Connect, confirmed for September 23–24 in Menlo Park.

Ray-Ban Meta Gen 3 — Two new models are reportedly in development under the codenames "Aperol" (a sunglasses design with thicker frames and larger battery) and "Bellini" (a lighter frame targeting prescription wearers). Key reported upgrades include Live AI runtime extending from the current 30 minutes to "hours," a camera quality jump described by Bloomberg as moving from iPhone 11 to iPhone 13 equivalence, and a Qualcomm AR1+ Gen 1 chipset that is 26% smaller and 7% more power-efficient than the current AR1. Pricing has not been confirmed, but Gen 2 starts at $299 for basic configurations and reaches $499 for prescription optics frames. A Connect reveal with availability within weeks is the most likely scenario, though some reports suggest a possible slip to early 2027.

Meta's dual-model approach — splitting sunglasses and optical frames into separate products rather than offering one frame with interchangeable lenses — signals a maturation of the market. Sunglasses wearers want larger batteries and outdoor durability. Prescription wearers want lighter weight and discreet aesthetics. Serving both with a single design involves too many compromises for a third-generation product.

Additional Meta devices may include follow-ups to the Ray-Ban Meta Display (the first display-equipped consumer model, launched in late 2025) and further brand collaborations beyond EssilorLuxottica's existing Ray-Ban and Oakley partnerships. Meta has historically used Connect as a hardware-dense event.

EssilorLuxottica's 2025 annual report confirmed that Meta AI glasses across all lines generated over 9 million lifetime units sold, with 2025 alone accounting for 7 million-plus. That installed base gives Meta a distribution moat — glasses available in optician shops alongside prescription lenses, not just electronics retailers — that new entrants will struggle to replicate in 2026.

Snap Specs: The $2,195 AR Wager

Black futuristic Snap Specs with transparent waveguide lens optics illustrating the $2,195 consumer AR spatial computing glasses launch

Snap's consumer Specs, unveiled at the Augmented World Expo on June 16, 2026, represent the most technically ambitious consumer AR device shipping this year — and the most expensive.

At $2,195 (pre-order with a $200 refundable deposit), Specs are more than 15 times the price of Snap's original 2016 Spectacles. The hardware includes a 51-degree diagonal field-of-view see-through display with 16 million colors, four cameras for spatial understanding and hand tracking, Snap OS (a custom Android-derived operating system), and voice and hand-gesture input. Weight lands at 132–136 grams depending on size. Battery life is approximately four hours, with the option to recharge via USB cable while wearing.

Specs ship to the U.S., U.K., and France this fall. The initial production run is reportedly around 100,000 units — a deliberate constraint. Snap has spent over $3 billion developing AR glasses across 11 years, including the acquisition of WaveOptics for waveguide display technology and Compound Photonics for LCOS microdisplays.

The market positioning question is whether consumers will pay premium AR headset pricing for a glasses-shaped device that cannot replace their phone and requires a fundamentally new interaction model. Snap CEO Evan Spiegel frames the bet as post-smartphone computing. IDC analyst Jitesh Ubrani characterized the timing as difficult given macroeconomic headwinds and Snap's core audience skewing young and price-sensitive. The 4-million-strong Lens developer library provides a software ecosystem head start, but translating Snapchat engagement into $2,195 hardware purchases is an unproven conversion.

For buyers whose primary needs are AI assistance, translation, or meeting transcription, Specs solves the wrong problem at the wrong price point. For developers, creators, and spatial computing enthusiasts, it is the most accessible standalone AR glasses platform available in 2026 — the Apple Vision Pro costs $3,499 and is a headset, not glasses.

Apple: Confirmed Development, Delayed Arrival

Apple will not ship smart glasses in 2026. That sentence is the most important takeaway for anyone holding off a purchase while waiting for Apple's entry.

Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reported in May 2026 that Apple's smart glasses project, codenamed N50, was originally planned for a late-2026 unveiling and early-2027 shipment. That timeline has slipped. The 9to5Mac report from May 31, 2026 now puts the launch at late 2027, with mass production in Q2 2027 per analyst Ming-Chi Kuo's forecasts.

What is known: the first-generation Apple smart glasses will be display-free — cameras, speakers, microphones, and Apple Intelligence, functioning as an iPhone accessory in the same category as AirPods or Apple Watch. Four acetate frame styles are reportedly in testing. Features will include photo and video capture (including spatial video), live translation, object and landmark identification via Visual Intelligence, phone calls, music, and an upgraded Siri expected to launch alongside iOS 27. Pricing is speculated to be competitive with Meta's $299–$499 range.

Apple paused its Vision Pro redesign in October 2025 to redirect engineering resources toward the glasses project. A lighter Vision Pro successor (Vision Air) is not expected before late 2028 or 2029. The strategic pivot is clear: Apple believes the mass-market future of wearable computing is glasses-shaped, not headset-shaped.

For consumers currently in the Apple ecosystem, the practical calculus is straightforward: the earliest plausible ship date is late 2027. That is 18 months away. Buying a smart glasses product today does not preclude buying Apple's offering later, and 18 months of utility from a current-generation device — particularly for translation, transcription, or professional productivity — carries its own value.

Independent and Emerging Brands Worth Tracking

Coverage of the smart glasses market overwhelmingly focuses on five companies: Meta, Samsung, Google, Snap, and Apple. This concentration obscures a growing independent tier that serves use cases the major platforms either cannot or choose not to address.

The deployment of wearable AI in regulated professional environments depends on hardware-level recording capabilities. While built-in cameras trigger institutional prohibitions regarding privacy and academic integrity in settings such as courtrooms, examination halls, and clinical facilities, camera-free audio glasses comply with institutional policies in a manner comparable to standard prescription eyewear or assistive hearing technologies.

Even Realities has established itself as the leading HUD-display independent with the G1 and G2. The company's roots in luxury eyewear (founders from Lindberg and Mykita) give it design credibility that most tech-first competitors lack. Palmer Luckey, founder of Oculus, wore G1 glasses during a TED talk — reading his entire presentation off the HUD while the audience assumed he was speaking from memory.

Dymesty occupies the camera-free, translation-and-productivity niche. Its titanium construction and 48-hour battery target international business travelers and professionals in compliance-restricted environments where camera-equipped glasses are prohibited.

Brilliant Labs Frame takes an open-source approach, with an FPGA-based architecture that allows developers to modify hardware behavior. The company targets hackers and developers rather than mainstream consumers.

RayNeo and Xiaomi are gaining ground in Asia-Pacific markets. RayNeo's lower-cost display glasses captured 3.4% global share in Q1 2026, while Xiaomi holds 3.1%, driven primarily by domestic China shipments.

The independent tier matters for two reasons beyond niche market service. First, these brands pressure the majors to innovate faster — Even Realities shipped a prescription-compatible HUD display before any major platform. Second, they serve as acquisition targets. The smart glasses landscape two years from now will likely include fewer independent names and more platform integrations, making present-day product diversity a window that may narrow.

The Full 2026–2027 Timeline at a Glance

Timeline Product Category Est. Price Key Specs
Shipping now Meta Ray-Ban Gen 2 Audio + camera $299–$499 12MP, 4–6h battery, Meta AI
June 2026 Meta Glasses (Adventurer / Fury / Kylie) Audio + camera From $299 Muse Spark AI, 8h battery, 26 styles
Shipping now Even Realities G1/G2 HUD display $599+ Mono HUD, no camera, 36h battery
Shipping now Dymesty AI Glasses Audio, camera-free $199–$299 35g titanium, 48h battery, 100+ languages
July 22, 2026 Samsung Galaxy Glasses (reveal) Audio + camera ~$400 Android XR, Gemini, 12MP, ~50g
Fall 2026 Gentle Monster / Warby Parker Android XR Audio + camera TBA Android XR, Gemini, iOS + Android
Sept 23–24, 2026 Meta Ray-Ban Gen 3 (expected reveal) Audio + camera ~$300–$500 Aperol + Bellini, extended Live AI
Fall 2026 Snap Specs Full AR $2,195 51° FoV, Snap OS, 132–136g, ~4h battery
Fall 2026 Xreal Aura Full AR (tethered) ≤$1,500 70° FoV, Android XR, <95g, compute puck
Late 2027 Apple Smart Glasses (N50) Audio + camera ~$299–$499 Apple Intelligence, Siri, iOS 27

Sources for dates and specifications are linked throughout the preceding sections. Rumors and leaked information are identified as such. Confirmed events (Samsung Unpacked July 22, Meta Connect September 23–24) are anchored by official announcements.

For a deeper comparison of latest advancements in smart glasses technology, including chipset generations, AI model architectures, and display technologies across all brands, the linked guide covers the technical substrate that the timeline above sits on.

Should You Buy Now or Wait? A Decision Framework

The worst purchase decision in a fast-moving product category is not buying the wrong device — it is indefinitely deferring a purchase while waiting for a product that may ship later than expected, cost more than rumored, or solve a problem you do not actually have.

If your primary need is meeting transcription, translation, or daily AI assistance — buy now. Products in the $199–$499 range already deliver these capabilities. Waiting for Samsung or Apple does not improve your 2026 work productivity; it delays it. Both Meta's current lineup and independent brands like Dymesty and Solos serve these use cases today. For users who specifically need camera-free office AI glasses for compliance-sensitive environments, the options available now are more mature than anything the major platforms have committed to building.

If you want the Android XR / Gemini ecosystem — wait until fall 2026. Samsung Galaxy Glasses should be available in Q3, with Warby Parker and Gentle Monster designs following. This is a reasonable three-to-four-month wait for buyers who prioritize Google ecosystem integration, especially if you already own a Samsung phone.

If you want AR spatial computing in a glasses form — Snap Specs and Xreal Aura arrive this fall. Budget $1,500–$2,195 and set expectations accordingly: these are early-generation spatial computing devices, not all-day wearables.

If you are committed to the Apple ecosystem and willing to wait — late 2027 is the earliest credible ship date. An 18-month wait. If you buy a $200–$400 pair of smart glasses today and use them for 18 months, the cost-per-month of utility is lower than a single month of most software subscriptions.

Budget guidance by price tier:

  • Under $300: Meta Glasses ($299), Dymesty ($199–$299), Solos AirGo 3. Audio-first, no display, immediate availability.
  • $300–$500: Meta Ray-Ban Gen 2, Samsung Galaxy Glasses (expected). Camera-equipped, AI-integrated.
  • $500–$1,000: Even Realities G1/G2. HUD display, camera-free, prescription-compatible.
  • Over $1,000: Xreal Aura (≤$1,500), Snap Specs ($2,195). Spatial AR computing, early-adopter territory.

For a comprehensive product-by-product evaluation of best AI glasses of 2026, the linked comparison covers each product's strengths and limitations in detail.

Frequently Asked Questions

When are Samsung Galaxy Glasses releasing?

Samsung is expected to reveal Galaxy Glasses at the Galaxy Unpacked event in London on July 22, 2026. Consumer availability is anticipated in Q3 2026, though Samsung has not confirmed a specific on-sale date. The glasses will run Android XR with Gemini AI.

Will Meta Ray-Ban Gen 3 have a display?

No. Ray-Ban Meta Gen 3 (codenames Aperol and Bellini) will be display-free, maintaining the audio-plus-camera architecture of the current Gen 2. Meta's display-equipped glasses are a separate product line (Ray-Ban Meta Display). Gen 3 focuses on significantly improved battery life and AI processing time.

How much do Snap Specs cost?

Snap Specs are priced at $2,195, with pre-orders open since June 16, 2026, requiring a $200 refundable deposit. Shipping to the U.S., U.K., and France is expected this fall. This positions Specs as a premium spatial computing device rather than a mass-market accessory.

Are Apple smart glasses coming in 2026?

Apple is not expected to ship smart glasses in 2026. The most recent reporting from Bloomberg (May 2026) indicates a late-2027 launch, with mass production beginning in Q2 2027. Apple may preview the product at a late-2026 or early-2027 event, but consumer availability before late 2027 is unlikely.

What are camera-free smart glasses and who makes them?

Cloud-connected neural processing networks enable camera-free smart glasses to support real-time AI translation, voice transcription, and conversational assistance through directional audio output and multi-microphone input arrays without any onboard imaging sensor. Manufacturers including Even Realities and Dymesty produce camera-free models that eliminate hardware-level recording capability, addressing institutional privacy policies that restrict camera-equipped devices in workplaces, courtrooms, schools, and clinical settings.

How big is the smart glasses market in 2026?

IDC data from Q1 2026 shows global smart eyewear shipments reached 3.57 million units in a single quarter, up 130% year over year. IDC forecasts full-year 2026 shipments of approximately 13.6 million units for display-less smart glasses alone, with the overall market expected to reach $5.1 billion in revenue. The category's compound annual growth rate through 2030 is projected at 18.9%.


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