Demand for hi-tech Ray Bans is soaring, but supply issues are slowing Meta down

January 8, 2026

Meta has made smart glasses cool, but it may not have enough supply to keep up with the demand it has created. The tech giant announced that it has paused its global expansion plans for the Ray-Ban Display line, which pairs top-of-the-line tech with classic elegance.

On January 6, Meta issued a statement celebrating the “overwhelming amount of interest” its “first-of-its-kind product” has received. “Product waitlists now extend well into 2026,” the company formerly known as Facebook revealed at CES.

All that buzz is great news for Meta, but the Ray-Ban Display shopping spree has left the product’s maker short on supplies. Meta plans to continue fulfilling orders in the United States before it makes its push into other regions. The snazzy wearables were initially slated to launch in the UK, France, Italy, and Canada early this year, according to Reuters.

If you’ve followed the wearable tech industry for a while, you’ll see a streak of irony in Meta’s supply-and-demand issues. When smart glasses first hit the market a decade ago, inventory far outpaced sales. Most notably, Snapchat ended up with hundreds of thousands of unsold Spectacles after struggling to hook consumers on its souped-up specs.

In 2024, Meta ushered in a new era of smart glasses when it announced its Orion line, which packed desired features into a device that doesn’t look too dorky. A partnership with Ray-Ban and Oakley parent EssilorLuxottica SA helped hi-tech consumers buy into the wearables fad while picking up even more style points.

That combination has proven popular among consumers. Meta’s Ray-Bans quickly soared to two million sales, and the tech giant has used the resulting demand to expand its physical retail footprint. There are now multiple brick-and-mortar stores where shoppers can buy Ray-Ban Displays and other pieces of wearable tech, including Meta’s Quest headsets.

For now, that retail presence will remain isolated in the United States, but Meta is still looking to improve its hi-tech Ray-Bans. An upcoming teleprompter feature will let users read notes that are projected via their glasses — no other screens necessary.

 

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