Wedoany.com Report-Dec.9, Warby Parker announced on Monday a deepened collaboration with Google, a subsidiary of Alphabet, to develop lightweight artificial intelligence-powered eyeglasses, with the first commercial product scheduled for release in 2026.
The timeline was revealed during The Android Show | XR Edition, marking the first public launch window since the partnership was initially disclosed earlier this year.
The joint project combines Warby Parker's expertise in stylish, affordable prescription eyewear with Google's Android XR operating system and Gemini multimodal AI model. The goal is to create comfortable, all-day-wearable glasses that integrate advanced AI assistance directly into everyday frames.
Google is working with multiple design partners—including Warby Parker, Samsung, and Gentle Monster—to produce attractive, lightweight devices in two main categories: AI glasses equipped with speakers, microphones, and cameras for hands-free, screen-free interaction with Gemini, and display-equipped AI glasses that feature a discreet in-lens heads-up display for private viewing of information such as real-time translation, navigation directions, or notifications.
Warby Parker described the forthcoming frames as "lightweight and AI-enabled" while declining to share details on pricing, specific technical specifications, or sales channels at this stage.
The initiative represents Google's latest effort to advance consumer augmented-reality eyewear following the discontinuation of its earlier Google Glass product nearly ten years ago. The company is now focusing on AI-driven functionality and fashion-forward design partnerships to broaden market acceptance.
Industry observers note growing activity in smart eyewear, with Meta Platforms advancing its Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses and Quest mixed-reality line, and Apple having introduced its Vision Pro spatial computing headset earlier this year.
The Warby Parker-Google collaboration aims to offer a lighter, more socially acceptable form factor that blends seamlessly into daily life, potentially expanding the reach of AI-assisted wearable technology to a wider audience starting in 2026.









