One neighbor reacted with a mix of curiosity and unease upon spotting the Meta Ray-Ban Display smart glasses perched on my face. Her reaction intensified when I explained their capabilities. After testing these cutting-edge, premium-priced smart glasses for a full week, I share a similar ambivalence. Equipped with a camera and Meta AI, these glasses allow users to capture images and receive descriptions of their surroundings. The integrated display unlocks additional features, such as real-time translations for foreign languages and overlaid walking directions in new environments.
Overview and Pricing
These represent Meta’s most sophisticated smart glasses to date, featuring a built-in display for enhanced interaction. They target early adopters willing to invest in emerging technology. Priced at $800—rising to around $869 with taxes—these glasses cost more than double the standard Ray-Ban Meta second-generation model. Options are limited to black or sand frames, both with transition lenses, offering fewer style choices than basic versions.
Key Strengths
These glasses stand out as the most user-friendly and practical for everyday use among current options. The display proves clear and intuitive, while the neural band delivers reliable performance.
Key Weaknesses
High cost and heavy reliance on Meta’s app ecosystem limit broader appeal. Users must charge both the glasses and the band separately.
Technical Specifications
- Display Resolution: 600 x 600 pixels
- Refresh Rate: Up to 90Hz (content at 30Hz)
- Brightness: 30-5000 nits
- Camera: 12MP with 3x zoom
- Video: 1440×1920 pixels at 30fps
- Battery Life: 248mAh (up to 6 hours for glasses), 134mAh (up to 18 hours for band)
- Charging Case: Up to 24 hours additional
- Storage: 32GB
- Wireless: Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.3
- Microphones: 6 (distributed across arms, nose pad, and contact mic)
- Compatibility: iOS 15.2+, Android 10+
Standout Features
The integration of AI and augmented reality in these glasses marks a significant advancement. From the initial wear, the display seamlessly overlays information onto the real world, activating with a simple finger tap and adjusting brightness to match surroundings—even dimming appropriately in low light or shining brightly against snowy landscapes.
This functionality extends to previewing captured media, displaying music album art, and providing live translations or captions during conversations.
Intuitive Gestures
Navigation relies on the Neural Band, a wrist strap that senses finger movements to control the interface. After initial practice, users can adjust volume, brightness, or zoom via wrist twists and pinches. Virtual typing allows discreet message replies by tracing letters in air or on surfaces, though it’s slower than voice input and limited to basic characters.
Occasional glitches required restarting the band once or twice daily during testing.
Enhanced AI Capabilities
Meta AI drives core smarts, identifying surroundings via voice queries like ‘Hey Meta, what am I looking at?’ and displaying relevant images. It accurately recognized landmarks like the Empire State Building and household items, including specific toys, but struggled with precise car models, often confusing brands.
Live translations and captions support English, Spanish, French, and Italian. Captions appear almost instantly, while translations handled Netflix shows adequately but faltered with rapid speech, occasionally garbling phrases—for instance, misrendering an Italian line about political threats.
Camera Innovations
The display aids precise framing for photos and videos, with a 3x zoom unavailable in prior models. Gesture controls enable panning and tilting during playback. A unique two-way video calling feature lets callers view your perspective via the glasses’ camera, compatible with Messenger, WhatsApp, and Instagram.
Limitations and Challenges
Mapping Shortcomings
Turn-by-turn walking directions, sourced from Overture and OpenStreetMap, perform well in select cities like New York, listing nearby spots with ratings. However, availability spans only 23 U.S. cities plus a handful internationally, excluding public transit options. As a beta feature, it lacks the polish of established mapping services.
Limited Integrations
While compatible with Meta apps, Gmail, Google Calendar, Outlook, and streaming services like Spotify and Apple Music, broader support is absent. Everyday tasks, such as adding grocery items or controlling smart home devices, remain unsupported. Ordering rides or deliveries through the glasses isn’t possible yet.
Battery Concerns
Official estimates claim 6 hours for the glasses and 18 for the band, but real-world use drained faster—dropping to 40% after 90 minutes of podcast listening. The compact charging case provides 24 extra hours via USB-C, though the band requires a proprietary cable.
Final Assessment
The Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses offer the most comprehensive smart glasses experience available, blending style with innovative display-driven features like media previews, directions, and discreet messaging. Yet, their $800 price and ecosystem lock-in hinder mass adoption. Expanding third-party integrations could elevate them, especially amid upcoming competition from rivals like Google and Amazon, whose offerings promise deeper capabilities.

