Apple Is Reportedly Developing AI Smart Glasses to Compete with Meta and Google

Apple’s AI glasses are set to launch by the end of next year and will function like Meta’s Ray-Bans.

By Sherin Shibu edited by Melissa Malamut May 23, 2025

Key Takeaways

  • Apple is reportedly working on its first pair of smart glasses to be released by the end of 2026.
  • The glasses will feature the Siri voice assistant for verbal commands and will be capable of handling phone calls and directions.

Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses have been an unexpected success, selling two million pairs since launching in late 2023, with Meta planning to produce 10 million a year by the end of 2026. Now Apple is preparing to enter the smart glasses market with a product of its own.

Bloomberg reported on Thursday that Apple engineers are working on a new pair of smart glasses that could be released at the end of next year. Prototypes are expected to be ordered (in bulk) soon for testing. Apple is also reportedly working on a powerful chip for the glasses that could differentiate them from the competition in sheer processing power.

Related: Google Is Making AI ‘Intelligent Eyewear’ With Warby Parker After Eyeing Meta’s Ray-Ban Success

The glasses are expected to have cameras, microphones, speakers, and a connection to a voice assistant for verbal commands. They will be compatible with music playback, directions, and phone calls. Like the Ray-Bans, which use Meta AI to process voice commands, Siri will handle requests on Apple glasses.

With a fresh pair of smart glasses, Apple is looking to capture the AI devices market, which is set to become more crowded next year. OpenAI, the company behind popular AI chatbot ChatGPT, announced earlier this week that it was collaborating with former Apple designer Jony Ive on AI gadgets to be released beginning next year. On Wednesday, OpenAI stated that it was furthering the collaboration by acquiring Ive’s AI hardware startup, io, for $6.5 billion.

Related: Amazon Wants to Deliver Packages Faster With Secret Smart Glasses. Here’s How.

Last fall, Bloomberg reported that Apple was running multiple focus groups to find out what its employees liked about smart glasses from competitors.

Apple’s ultimate goal is reportedly to develop a pair of augmented reality (AR) glasses, which would overlay the real world with data and images. A source told Bloomberg that Apple CEO Tim Cook is intent on making a pair of AR glasses before Meta can, and that AR glasses are “the only thing” Cook is “really spending his time on from a product development standpoint.”

News leaked in April that Meta was looking into making its first smartphone-alternative AI glasses with an embedded screen to compete with Apple’s iPhone.

Google Is Also Making Smart Glasses

Google announced earlier this week at its I/O conference that it was committing $150 million to create AI glasses in partnership with Warby Parker. The glasses, which include AI features like voice commands sent to Google’s Gemini AI assistant, are expected to launch next year.

In a live demonstration, the glasses could send text messages, answer questions about objects in the external world, and translate from one language to another in real-time.

Related: Meta Is Reportedly Working on Smart Glasses With a Screen — at a Price Point $1,000 More Than Its Ray-Bans

Key Takeaways

  • Apple is reportedly working on its first pair of smart glasses to be released by the end of 2026.
  • The glasses will feature the Siri voice assistant for verbal commands and will be capable of handling phone calls and directions.

Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses have been an unexpected success, selling two million pairs since launching in late 2023, with Meta planning to produce 10 million a year by the end of 2026. Now Apple is preparing to enter the smart glasses market with a product of its own.

Bloomberg reported on Thursday that Apple engineers are working on a new pair of smart glasses that could be released at the end of next year. Prototypes are expected to be ordered (in bulk) soon for testing. Apple is also reportedly working on a powerful chip for the glasses that could differentiate them from the competition in sheer processing power.

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Sherin Shibu

News Reporter at Entrepreneur
Entrepreneur Staff
Sherin Shibu is a business news reporter at Entrepreneur.com. She previously worked for PCMag, Business Insider, The Messenger, and ZDNET as a reporter and copyeditor. Her areas of coverage encompass tech, business, strategy, finance, and even space. She is a Columbia University graduate.

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