The Meta Ray-Ban Display brings a full-color built-in display to a familiar Wayfarer-style Ray-Ban frame.
On the right lens, you’ll see a 600×600-pixel, ~20° field-of-view (FOV) screen that floats just below your line of sight.
The glasses include a 12 MP camera, open-ear speakers, mic array, and transition lenses.
Control is handled via the bundled Neural Band wrist strap, which senses muscle signals to scroll, tap or zoom.

source: fb
What Makes It Interesting
- If you’re just looking for something useful: These glasses let you check messages, captions, or directions with a quick glance — no phone juggling and no breaking the moment.
- If you’re into immersive events: AR layers, hints, or behind-the-scenes details can appear right on the lens, making experiences feel more connected and responsive.
- If you build things: The Neural Band + display combo enables lightweight AR interactions, subtle overlays, and creative extensions of physical spaces.
source: fb
Limitations & Considerations
- The display is only in the right lens: It offers a narrow ~20° FOV — great for quick info but not full AR immersion.
- Battery life is about six hours: With all the tech in the frame, they may feel a bit heavy for all-day wear.
- Availability is limited: You must book a demo before buying, and stock may require waiting.
- The software ecosystem is still developing: The glasses require the Meta AI app and a supported smartphone.
Here’s a review we like:
Looking Ahead
This hardware feels like one of the first wearable devices designed for immersive experiences rather than novelty. As more developers build content (AR overlays, experience-specific apps) and as venues integrate them into events, the Ray-Ban Display could become a major entry point into immersive entertainment.

