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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Alex Lee

Where the heck are our smart glasses, Meta?

You can make video calls and view real-time captions and directions on the screen - (AFP/Getty)

The Ray-Ban Meta Display are Meta’s first smart glasses, using a built-in micro-LED screen in the right lens, allowing you to stream, follow map directions, take calls and more.

They’ve been available to buy in the US since last year, but the international launch seems to have been delayed indefinitely, with the stated UK release date of “early 2026” having come and gone.

“Meta is pausing Meta Ray-Ban Display’s international expansion to the UK, France, Italy and Canada due to an overwhelming amount of interest in the US and limited inventory,” said the company at CES 2026. “Meta will continue to focus on fulfilling orders in the US while it re-evaluates international availability.”

Until then, Meta’s eyewear options this side of the Atlantic are the second-generation Ray-Ban Meta glasses with a new 12MP ultrawide camera, 3K video capture and better battery life, as well as a pair of Oakleys that link up with Garmin smartwatches and Strava, automatically recording footage when your watch detects certain stats.

To tide us over while we wait for the Display, Meta’s added two new prescription frames to the existing Ray-Ban Meta gen 2 and the Oakley line-up. Dubbed the ‘Blayzer’ (a sleek rectangular shape) and the ‘Scriber’ (a more modern, rounded silhouette), the styles can handle almost any prescription and feature optician-adjustable temple tips, interchangeable nose pads and flexible overextension hinges.

Read more: Best VR headsets

Available in a range of new matte and transparent colourways, the prescription-friendly frames will be available from 14 April starting at £429.

Here’s everything you need to know about the Ray-Ban Meta Display smart glasses, the Ray-Ban Meta gen 2 and the Oakley Meta Vanguard, including release date and price.

Ray-Ban Meta Display: Release date

(Meta)

The Ray-Ban Meta display glasses launched on 30 September in the US. Meta had planned to release the glasses internationally in early 2026, but since delayed the launch, claiming “overwhelming” demand in the US.

As for the Ray-Ban Meta gen 2 and the new Oakley Meta Vanguard smart glasses, those are already available to buy now in the UK.

Ray-Ban Meta Display: Price

The Ray-Ban Meta display glasses cost $799 (£580) in the US. which includes the wristband. That’s more expensive than Meta’s virtual reality Quest 3 and Meta Quest 3S. The company hasn’t revealed UK pricing yet, but I’m expecting it to be in line with the US launch when they eventually arrive.

The Ray-Ban Meta gen 2 start from £379, which is the same price as the first-generation Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses that launched in 2023.

The Oakley Meta Vanguard are slightly pricier. They cost £499, which is £100 more expensive than the previous Oakley Meta HSTN range, which started at £399 in the UK, topping out at £479 for the higher-end lenses.

Ray-Ban Meta Display: What’s new?

(Meta)

Unlike the previous Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, which are basically cameras and speakers built into a frame, the new design actually allows you to see things through a screen in the lens.

The micro-LED display sits in the right lens. On stage, Zuckerberg said it’s sharp enough to read text and bright enough to use in daylight. Meta says it’s 600px x 600px with a 20-degree field of view, running at 90Hz (though most content plays closer to 30Hz).

You won’t be watching films on your face. It’s more of a heads-up display built into your glasses. Meta says you can stream Instagram reels, see the person you’re calling on WhatsApp or Messenger, read captions as someone’s speaking, follow turn-by-turn directions or check what song’s playing. When it’s not in use, the display fades away so it doesn’t sit in your vision the whole time.

The glasses can also act as a camera viewfinder, showing you what the lens is seeing before you take the shot, fixing one of the annoyances I had with the previous Ray-Ban Meta glasses. I never knew if I was pointing my head in the right direction to perfectly frame the picture.

To control it, there’s a new neural band wristband, which uses sensors to detect tiny muscle movements in your hand. Meta showed how you could pinch your fingers, twist your wrist or even trace letters on a surface to type, all without ever touching the glasses.

The glasses last around six hours on their own before needing a recharge, with the chunky case adding roughly another 30 hours. The neural band has its own battery and is said to last up to 18 hours.

The Ray-Ban Meta Display comes in two colours – classic black or a beige sand finish – and ships with transitional lenses as standard. Prescription options will also be available.

Ray-Ban Meta glasses gen 2

The second-gen Ray-Ban Meta glasses have a new 12MP ultrawide camera and can record 3K video (which is around 30fps in that mode). Meta also says battery life has been boosted to up to eight hours of typical use. They start at £379, the same price as the originals, and are available to buy now in the UK.

Meta is also adding some software upgrades. Conversation Focus will help boost the voice of the person you're talking to and quieten background noise, and live translation is being expanded with more languages and offline packs for translation without wifi.

On the capture side, slow-motion and hyperlapse recording modes will arrive via updates – effects you apply to your clips afterwards when you save or share them. There are more colours to choose from as well, in the same wayfarer, skyler and headliner designs.

Buy now £379, Meta.com

Oakley Meta Vanguard smart glasses

The Oakley Meta Vanguard are the pair for athletes. They’ve got a wraparound frame with a centred 12MP camera and a wider 122-degree field of view. They’re built for use while on outdoor runs, bike rides and training sessions. They’re tougher than the Ray-Bans too, with IP67 water and dust resistance, and last longer, with up to nine hours of battery life.

The audio has also been improved. They feature louder speakers than the previous Oakley HSTN, and the new five-mic array is designed to cut through wind noise, so you’ll always be heard when training outdoors. Like the Ray-Bans, they’ll also get slow-mo and hyperlapse recording modes via a software update.

The most interesting part is that they now work with Garmin smartwatches and Strava. You can start a recording the usual way – with the button on the frame or by saying “Hey Meta”. The glasses can also be set to auto-capture clips when you hit certain milestones in your workout, such as a spike in heart rate, climbing elevation or a distance target. You can then sync footage and overlay your stats from Garmin or Strava.

The glasses are currently available to pre-order for £499 for shipping on 21 October.

Buy now £499, Meta.com

Prefer virtual reality? We’ve rounded up the best VR headsets to buy now

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