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Home Android

Smart glasses for the rest of us: Meta’s Ray-Ban glasses get the prescription treatment

April 5, 2026
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What you need to know

  • Meta’s smart glasses finally address a major flaw: they now support prescription lenses out of the box.
  • The Ray-Ban Meta Blayzer Optics and Scriber Optics’ frames (hinges, nose pads, temple tips) have been redesigned to properly handle thicker prescription lenses.
  • Pricing starts at $499, with pre-orders live and retail availability set for April 14.

The first few generations of smart glasses had a pretty glaring blind spot: they assumed everyone had perfect vision. If you needed prescription lenses, you either had to squint through the device or pay extra to have an optician fit lenses into frames that weren’t made for them.

Android Central’s Take

For the first time, Meta has made something that actually works for me. I wear glasses from the moment I get up until I go to bed. I never wanted to switch to a heavier, battery-powered device. Now, these are simply my glasses. There’s no compromise or trade-off, just better glasses.

Meta has finally addressed this. Today, the company introduced its first AI glasses designed specifically for people who wear prescriptions. The Ray-Ban Meta Blayzer Optics and Scriber Optics start at $499, with pre-orders open now. They’ll be available in stores and at optical retailers on April 14.

Meta didn’t just add prescription support as an afterthought: it redesigned the frames to fit them. The glasses have overextension hinges for thicker lenses, interchangeable nose pads, and adjustable temple tips.

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There are two new styles: the rectangular Blayzer, which comes in Standard and Large, and the rounded Scriber. Color options include matte black, transparent dark olive, and seasonal shades like ice grey and stone beige.

Image 1 of 2

(Image credit: Meta)

Ray-Ban Meta Scriber Optics in black frame
(Image credit: Meta)

The software might matter more than the frames

What’s more interesting is that Meta is adding hands-free nutrition tracking. You can speak a command or take a quick photo of your meal, and Meta AI will pull out the nutrition details, log them in the app, and eventually give you personalized advice, like, “What should I eat to increase my energy?”

This feature is for users 18 and older in the U.S., and it really only works if you wear the glasses all the time.

Meta is also introducing on-device WhatsApp summaries. You can say, “Hey Meta, catch me up on my messages,” and get a quick summary of your group chats. You can also ask for details, like, “What did Jamie suggest for dinner?”

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Android Central’s Take

To be frank, Meta isn’t doing this out of kindness. The company doesn’t really care about your prescription. It wants you to wear a camera, a microphone, and an always-listening AI assistant all day long. The promises about on-device encryption are nice, and the privacy reassurances sound good in a press release. But this is the same company that built its business on collecting attention and data. Now, it just wants to be even closer, right in front of your eyes.

All of this is processed on the glasses and remains end-to-end encrypted. This is Meta’s answer to people who worry about having a camera and microphone on their face.

Meta is also expanding neural handwriting to iMessage, so you can write a reply with your finger on any surface and send it quietly. It’s adding display recording, which captures both what’s on your lens display and your point-of-view video. Pedestrian navigation will be available in every U.S. city starting in May.

Meta says it has already sold millions of these glasses, with sales more than tripling each year. Those buyers were mostly early adopters.

Now, prescription support could attract billions of people who wear glasses daily. The company is offering more choices, like new Oakley Meta lenses — including Prizm Transitions for the Vanguard — seasonal colors for the Ray-Ban Gen 2 lineup, and live translation in 20 languages coming this summer.

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