Google on Tuesday revealed its new smart‑glasses design, returning to a market it first touched more than a decade ago, now refreshed with a sleeker, more lifestyle‑driven aesthetic.
Set to debut later this year, the glasses thrust Google into a head‑to‑head battle with Meta, whose Ray‑Ban smart glasses dominate the category with over seven million sold.
Google equips its “audio glasses” with a microphone, camera and small speaker, giving users the ability to call, stream music, snap photos and talk to Gemini AI.
The company, which has yet to announce a release date or pricing, introduced two collections at its annual Google I/O developer conference near its Mountain View, California, headquarters, one designed with US eyewear brand Warby Parker and another with South Korean label Gentle Monster.
Built with Samsung’s technical expertise, the glasses will connect seamlessly to both Android and Apple phones.
The launch marks Google’s reentry into a field defined by one of its most infamous setbacks: the 2013 Google Glass, whose integrated camera ignited privacy fears that ultimately doomed the product.

In its new push, the company is placing its bets on design as the key to winning consumers back. Yet Google’s decision to offer a camera‑equipped model all but guarantees renewed scrutiny, inviting many of the same privacy questions that have dogged Meta’s smart‑glasses efforts.
Google is additionally developing a display‑enabled version of the glasses, akin to the model Meta launched in fall 2025. That device, which debuted as a prototype last year, has now reached a more mature stage of developer testing, the company said, though it stopped short of revealing timelines or technical details.
As Google pushes deeper into wearables, the company is positioning its smart‑glasses lineup as both a technological reset and a strategic comeback. Whether the new devices can overcome the privacy baggage of the past and the competitive pressure from Meta will become clearer as they move closer to market. For now, Google is signalling that its ambitions in augmented hardware are far from over.
