Products·2 min read·Google Blog

Google's Gemini Glasses Arrive This Fall With Warby Parker and Gentle Monster on the Frames

At I/O 2026 Google unveiled Intelligent Eyewear — Gemini-powered audio and display glasses built on Android XR, co-designed with Samsung, Warby Parker and Gentle Monster, with the audio frames shipping first this fall.

Google's Gemini Glasses Arrive This Fall With Warby Parker and Gentle Monster on the Frames
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Google used its I/O 2026 keynote to bring smart glasses back from the dead, unveiling Intelligent Eyewear — a pair of Gemini-powered frame lines built on Android XR and designed in partnership with Samsung, Warby Parker and Gentle Monster. The pitch is glasses that deliver in-the-moment help without yanking the wearer's attention out of the room. Audio frames ship this fall; display frames follow later.

Lifestyle photo of Google’s Intelligent Eyewear, co-designed with Gentle Monster, unveiled at Google I/O 2026
Google’s Intelligent Eyewear lineup, co-designed with Gentle Monster and Warby Parker, unveiled at I/O 2026. Image: Google.

There are two product tiers. Audio glasses deliver spoken guidance through tiny speakers near the temples and are positioned as the entry point — they look like ordinary eyewear and pair with both Android and iOS phones. Display glasses overlay information directly in the wearer's field of view: real-time translation, walking navigation, contextual notes about whatever the user is looking at. Google says either pair wakes on "Hey Google" or a tap on the frame, with Gemini 2.5 Pro doing the on-device reasoning.

The fashion partnerships are the most interesting part of the announcement. Gentle Monster supplies an elongated oval sunglass and Warby Parker contributes a classic rounded-square optical frame, and both companies have committed to retail distribution through their existing channels. That is a direct shot at Meta's Ray-Ban partnership, which has dominated the consumer smart-glasses category for two product generations. Google is also leaning on Samsung for the underlying Android XR hardware reference design — the same platform Samsung uses for its mixed-reality headset.

Pricing was not disclosed at the keynote and Google did not name the chipset, but the on-device Gemini 2.5 Pro claim implies meaningful local NPU capacity rather than pure phone-tethered inference. Features called out on stage included hands-free message dictation, AI-grounded "look at this" search, and real-time translation rendered as captions for display-frame wearers. iOS pairing is the most aggressive interoperability stance Google has taken with an Android XR product, and it is a clear concession that nobody buys glasses they can only use with one phone.

Intelligent Eyewear sits alongside Gemini Spark, Gemini 3.5 Flash and a redesigned Google Search box in this year's I/O announcements, all detailed on the Google blog. Audio glasses launching first is a smart de-risk — the display version still has battery and optics work to do — but the launch lineup confirms that Google now sees Gemini as a wearable-first platform, not just a phone and browser feature.

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