Meta Unveils Ray-Ban Meta Display — AI Glasses With In-Lens Screen and Neural Wristband
Ray-Ban Meta Display features full-color in-lens display, EMG wristband for gesture control, 18-hour battery, and Meta AI integration. Starting at $799.
Alex Chen
Meta announced the Ray-Ban Meta Display on September 17, 2025, featuring a full-color, high-resolution in-lens display and the Meta Neural Band — an EMG wristband that translates muscle signals into commands. Starting at $799, it's Meta's most ambitious AI hardware yet, according to Meta.
The Display
Previous Ray-Ban Meta glasses had cameras and speakers but no screen. The Display version adds a full-color, high-resolution display visible within the lens itself. This enables visual AI responses — seeing search results, navigation directions, translations, and notifications without pulling out a phone.
The 18-hour battery life and IPX7 water rating make it a practical all-day wearable, not a demo device.
Meta Neural Band
The EMG (electromyography) wristband reads electrical signals from muscle movements, translating tiny hand gestures into commands. Want to scroll through notifications? A micro-gesture with your finger. Dismiss an alert? A different gesture. No touchpad on the frame, no voice command needed.
This is the same technology Meta has been developing through its neural interface research since acquiring CTRL-labs in 2019. Seven years from acquisition to consumer product.
Meta AI Integration
The glasses integrate Meta AI with visual context. Point at a restaurant and ask "what's good here?" The camera sees the restaurant, Meta AI processes the visual input, and the answer appears in the display. Navigation directions overlay the real world. Live captions and translation work in real-time.
What This Means for AI
Most AI interactions today happen on phones and computers. Meta is betting that AI becomes significantly more useful when it's always available, always seeing what you see, and responding instantly in your field of vision. If this works at scale, it shifts AI from something you use at a desk to something that augments every moment of your day.
Our Take
The Ray-Ban Meta Display is the first AI glasses product that looks like a real consumer device rather than a tech demo. The $799 price is aggressive for the technology involved. The EMG wristband solves the input problem that killed Google Glass. Whether mainstream consumers will pay $799 for AI glasses depends on whether "AI that sees what you see" proves genuinely useful in daily life — not just impressive in demos. The prescription-optimized versions shipping in March 2026 suggest Meta is thinking about everyday use, not just early adopters.
FAQ
What is the Ray-Ban Meta Display? The Ray-Ban Meta Display is Meta's AI glasses with a full-color in-lens display, 18-hour battery life, and Meta AI integration. It starts at $799 and launched September 17, 2025.
What is the Meta Neural Band? The Meta Neural Band is an EMG wristband that reads muscle electrical signals, translating micro-gestures into commands without voice or touch controls.
Can the Ray-Ban Meta Display take prescriptions? Yes, prescription-optimized versions (Ray-Ban Meta Blayzer Optics and Scriber Optics) were announced in March 2026, starting at $499.