

We mocked smart glasses for a decade — and then Snap walked on stage at AWE 2026 and made us all reach for our wallets. On June 16, 2026, Snap unveiled Specs, its long-awaited standalone augmented-reality glasses. No phone tether, no puck — a full wearable computer that you wear on your face.
What's actually in them
- Standalone AR. Fully self-contained — no external puck or cable. Two Snapdragon processors do the work on-device.
- A genuinely big display. Snap's own liquid-crystal-on-silicon panels push a 51° field of view and 16M colors — roughly a 115-inch screen floating ~10 feet in front of you.
- Light(ish) for what they are. Swiss TR90 polymer frames in two sizes, ~132–136 g.
- ~4 hours of continuous use, extended to ~20 hours with the charging case.
- Privacy by design. A recording LED, plus on-device processing so you control what's stored, synced, or shared.
The catch
They're $2,195, available to pre-order now (with a $200 refundable deposit) and shipping this fall in the US, UK, and France. So yes — the same internet that called Google Glass wearers "Glassholes" in 2013 is now lining up to put a four-figure face computer on pre-order. Character development.
Whether 2026 is finally the year AR glasses stop being a punchline, or just a very expensive way to relive 2013, we'll find out this fall.
Sources: Snap Newsroom · CNBC · TechCrunch
About the Author
Federico Ulfo
Founder, Engineer
AI Socratic
Founder of AI Socratic