Samsung has spent the better part of two years dropping hints about smart glasses without ever quite committing to the idea in public. That changes on July 22, when the company steps on stage in London for its second Galaxy Unpacked event of 2026. Alongside the already well leaked Galaxy Z Fold 8 lineup, Samsung is expected to give the world its first real look at Galaxy Glasses, a project that has been circling in patents, earnings calls, and Google partnership announcements since late 2025.
This is not a small side project. Samsung is walking into a market Meta has owned almost completely for the past three years, and it is doing so with a hardware partner list that includes Google, Qualcomm, and two actual eyewear brands. Here is what the glasses are shaping up to be, what they can do, and why the timing says more about Samsung’s ambitions than the glasses themselves.
⭐ Quick facts
- Codenamed Jinju internally, running Google’s Android XR platform with Gemini built in.
- Built with a Snapdragon AR1 chip, a 12MP camera, and no built in display on this first model.
- Co-designed with Gentle Monster and Warby Parker, giving buyers two very different looks.
- Leaked pricing points to $379 to $499, with a full commercial launch expected in fall 2026.
- Samsung is stepping into a market Meta currently controls with roughly 97 percent of AI glasses sales.
What Samsung Is Actually Building
Galaxy Glasses, known inside Samsung under the codename Jinju, are not a standalone computer you wear on your face. They lean on what Google and Samsung have been calling a companion device architecture, where the glasses themselves stay light and simple while the heavy computational lifting happens on your paired phone over Bluetooth and Wi-Fi. That is the same basic playbook Meta uses with its Ray-Ban line, and for good reason: it is the only approach that has actually produced glasses people are willing to wear all day.
Inside the frame, Samsung is reportedly using Qualcomm’s Snapdragon AR1 chip, paired with a 12MP Sony camera for photos, video, and the kind of on-the-fly object recognition Google has been demoing since I/O. There is no display in this first generation. Samsung is starting with an audio and camera first device, similar in spirit to the original Ray-Ban Meta glasses rather than the pricier Ray-Ban Display model Meta released last year. That is a deliberate, conservative choice, and it lines up with a company that would rather nail the basics on its first attempt than ship something overambitious and buggy.
Two Frames, One Very Deliberate Message
The design side of this launch might matter more than the chip inside it. Samsung did not build these glasses alone. It partnered with Gentle Monster, the Korean eyewear label known for bold, fashion forward frames, and separately with Warby Parker for a more understated, classic silhouette. Both companies showed early frame designs alongside Google at I/O back in May, and the split is intentional: one frame aimed at buyers who want their glasses to look like a statement piece, the other aimed at people who just want something they would wear to the office without a second thought.
It is a smarter approach than it might first appear. Meta learned the hard way that smart glasses live or die on whether people actually want to be seen wearing them, which is exactly why it partnered with Ray-Ban instead of building its own frames from scratch. Samsung skipping straight to two fashion partners, rather than one, suggests it studied that lesson closely.
What Gemini Actually Lets You Do
The software side is where Samsung is making its real pitch. Because the glasses run Android XR with Gemini baked in, the feature list reads longer than what Meta currently offers on audio only glasses. Reported capabilities include turn by turn walking directions that adjust to the direction you are actually facing, live audio translation that preserves the tone and cadence of the original speaker’s voice rather than flattening it into a robotic monotone, automatic notification summaries, calendar management through voice, and contextual questions about whatever you are looking at, like asking what kind of cloud formation is overhead or what plant you are standing next to.
None of that is unheard of on its own. What is different is having it wired into Gemini’s broader ecosystem across Gmail, Calendar, Maps, and Search, rather than a standalone assistant that only understands the glasses themselves. If Samsung and Google can make that integration feel seamless rather than gimmicky, it is a genuine point of separation from Meta’s current lineup.
Price, Timing, and the Fine Print
Samsung has confirmed nothing officially ahead of July 22, but supply chain leaks have been consistent enough to treat as close to accurate. The audio only Jinju model is expected to land somewhere between $379 and $499, undercutting Meta’s $799 Ray-Ban Display while sitting close to Meta’s cheaper audio focused frames, which start at $299. A full commercial rollout is expected in fall 2026, meaning the London event is likely a preview and specification reveal rather than a same day, buy it now launch.
That timeline matters because of what else is happening at the same event. Samsung’s foldable lineup is also getting more expensive this cycle, and not because of profit margins. Industry wide component costs have been climbing for over a year now, largely because memory chip prices have surged as AI data centers soak up global DRAM and NAND supply. Wearables are not immune to that pressure, and it is part of why Samsung is easing Galaxy Glasses in as a preview rather than committing to a hard price and ship date months in advance.
The Market Samsung Is Walking Into
It is worth being honest about the scale of what Samsung is chasing here. Meta and EssilorLuxottica, the company behind Ray-Ban and Oakley, currently control something like 97 percent of AI glasses sales, off the back of roughly 7 million units sold in 2025 alone, nearly triple the combined total of the two years before that. Meta has also kept moving, launching a trio of cheaper glasses this past June starting at $299, on top of its $799 Ray-Ban Display model from last fall.
Samsung is not naive about that gap. Its own foldable pricing strategy this cycle, holding the base Z Fold 8 close to last year’s price while rivals let their prices climb ahead of Apple’s rumored foldable iPhone, shows a company that understands the value of undercutting an established leader on price while it builds credibility. Coming in below Meta’s premium tier and close to its budget tier is the same move, applied to glasses instead of phones.
What to Actually Watch For on July 22
The honest answer is that Samsung’s first smart glasses do not need to beat Meta outright. They need to be good enough, and cheap enough, to convince Galaxy phone owners that wearing a camera and an AI assistant on their face is worth trying for the first time. Samsung already has thousands of phones in pockets to sell into, a real advantage Meta does not get for free.
What is genuinely uncertain until Samsung actually takes the stage is battery life, how natural the Gemini features feel outside a demo booth, and whether the audio quality and camera performance hold up against glasses Meta has now had three product cycles to refine. Pricing and partnerships can get you attention. Whether people keep wearing the glasses past the first week comes down to details that only show up once real units are in real hands, which is exactly what the fall 2026 launch window is going to test.

