Snap officially opened preorders for Specs, its augmented reality glasses that the company calls the first “true AR glasses” available to consumers. At $2,195 a pair, CEO Evan Spiegel is betting that the post-smartphone era starts now.

What You Get for $2,195
Specs are the culmination of nearly a decade of Snap’s AR hardware efforts. The glasses feature dual OLED displays projected through waveguide lenses, offering a field of view that Snap says is wider than any previous consumer AR headset. They run on a Qualcomm Snapdragon AR2 Gen 2 chipset and include spatial audio through open-ear speakers.
The glasses weigh 227 grams, which Snap has worked hard to reduce from earlier developer prototypes that weighed over 300 grams. They ship with prescription lens compatibility and come in three frame styles.
Battery life is rated at approximately 4 hours of continuous AR use, or up to 8 hours when using the glasses primarily as a Bluetooth audio device with occasional AR overlays. A carrying case doubles as a charger and provides an additional 8 hours.
Features and Capabilities
Specs support hand tracking, voice commands, and a small touchpad on the right temple for navigation. Users can pin AR objects in physical space, receive turn-by-turn navigation overlaid on their real view, translate text in real time, and run Snap’s ecosystem of AR lenses in the physical world.
Snap’s AR ecosystem includes over 350,000 lenses built by third-party developers. Many of these, originally designed for Snapchat’s phone-based AR, have been adapted for Specs. The glasses also integrate with Snap Maps for location-based AR content and Snap’s messaging platform.
The companion app works on both iOS and Android. Users need a Snapchat account to activate the glasses, which has drawn criticism from privacy advocates who point to Snapchat’s data collection practices.
Competition in the AR Space
Snap enters a market that has seen mixed results. Meta’s Ray-Ban Stories sold well as a camera/audio device but never delivered on AR promises. Apple’s Vision Pro launched at $3,499 as a mixed-reality headset rather than glasses, and sales have been modest. Microsoft’s HoloLens remains enterprise-focused at $3,500.
The closest competitor is probably Xreal’s Air 2 Ultra at $699, which offers AR display capabilities through a tethered smartphone connection. But Snap positions Specs as a standalone device with no phone tether required for core features.
At $2,195, Specs undercut Apple’s Vision Pro by over $1,300 while offering a form factor that actually looks like regular eyewear. Whether that price point is low enough to drive mainstream adoption remains the open question.
Snap’s Hardware Track Record
Snap has burned through billions on hardware before. The Spectacles camera glasses launched in 2016 were a cultural phenomenon that generated memes and long lines at vending machines, but sold modestly. Subsequent versions never found mass market success, and Snap wrote off hundreds of millions in unsold inventory.
Specs represent a fundamentally different bet. Where Spectacles were a novelty camera device, Specs are positioned as a computing platform. Spiegel has said publicly that he believes AR glasses will eventually replace smartphones, and that Snap needs to build the hardware platform to own that transition.
The $2,195 price suggests Snap is targeting early adopters and developers rather than mainstream consumers. Snap says it expects to sell Specs in “limited quantities” through the fall, with broader availability planned for 2027.
