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Meta is aiming to sell 10 million wearable devices in the second half of 2026 alone — and to hit that number, the company is preparing a much wider lineup than the Ray-Ban and Oakley smart glasses consumers have seen so far.
An internal memo from Meta Wearable VP Alex Himel, viewed by The Information, details plans for at least four new smart glasses models launching through the remainder of this year. The first, codenamed “Modelo,” could arrive as soon as June. That would be followed by “Luna” and “RBM2 Refresh” in the fall — the latter suggesting a new generation of the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses. Rounding out 2026, a fourth pair codenamed “Mojito VIP” is expected in December.
Beyond this year’s lineup, Meta is also testing glasses codenamed “Artemis” and “SSG” (short for “supersensing” glasses). The SSG model reportedly features a camera that can remain on for extended periods, giving AI continuous awareness of the wearer’s surroundings — a concept reminiscent of Google’s Project Astra demo, but more ambient and always-on.
An AI Pendant Is on the Way
Perhaps the most intriguing reveal from the memo is Meta’s plan for an AI-powered pendant, set to enter testing next year. Described as similar to the Limitless wearable — a device Meta acquired the tech behind in 2025 — the pendant would focus on audio capture: recording, transcribing, and summarizing conversations. Unlike the camera-equipped glasses, this would be an always-on device in an audio-only capacity, potentially filling a different niche for users who want AI assistance without wearing cameras.
Hatch Agent and Wearables for Work
The memo also mentions “Hatch,” a new consumer-focused AI agent being developed for Meta’s smart glasses. This would sit alongside the company’s existing AI capabilities, offering a more dedicated assistant experience on the wearable platform.
On the business side, Meta is developing a subscription program called “Wearables for Work.” This could help the company generate recurring revenue rather than relying entirely on one-time device sales — a move that mirrors how enterprise hardware companies have long operated.
Production Capacity Is Scaling Fast
The 10 million unit sales target for H2 2026 is ambitious, but Meta and its manufacturing partner EssilorLuxottica appear to be preparing for even higher demand. A Bloomberg report from earlier this year noted that the companies have doubled expected smart glasses production capacity, aiming for 20 million units annually by the end of 2026, with the ability to scale further to 30 million units.
This follows a major shift in strategy at Meta’s Reality Labs division, which earlier this year pivoted to prioritize AI and smart glasses while reducing emphasis on VR and metaverse efforts. The company laid off roughly 10 percent of Reality Labs staff as part of that reorientation.
What This Means
The breadth of Meta’s 2026 lineup suggests the company isn’t just iterating on a successful product — it’s building out an entire ecosystem of wearable AI devices at different price points and form factors. Between audio-only pendants, standard camera glasses, and supersensing glasses with persistent environmental awareness, Meta seems to be placing bets across the full spectrum of what smart eyewear could become.
For consumers, the takeaway is clear: the smart glasses market is about to get a lot more crowded, and the options will vary wildly in capability and price. Whether you want a simple AI companion that lives in your pocket (or around your neck), or glasses that watch and understand your world, Meta is betting you’ll want at least one wearble on your face in the near future.
Sources
- Meta Reportedly Plans 4 New Smart Glasses Models Amid Aggressive 10M Unit Push — Road to VR
- Meta Memo Outlines Ambitious Hardware Plans Including New AI Pendant — The Information
- Meta Acquires AI Wearables Startup Limitless — Reuters
- Meta Said to Discuss Doubling Ray-Ban Glasses Output — Bloomberg
- Meta and EssilorLuxottica Extend Partnership to 2030 — Road to VR


