Meta appears to be moving its next Ray-Ban AI glasses closer to release after a new set of U.S. regulatory filings surfaced in March 2026. The documents identify two upcoming models, RayBan Meta Scriber and RayBan Meta Blazer and describe the tested hardware as production units, a detail that suggests these devices are further along than an early prototype stage.
The filings also show that the Blazer variant is planned in both regular and large sizes. While large portions of the paperwork remain redacted, the documents reference a charging case and support for the Wi-Fi 6 UNII-4 band in the 5.9 GHz range, pointing to continued emphasis on portable use, stronger connectivity and faster data handling for camera and AI-driven tasks.
That matters because Meta’s broader wearables strategy is becoming clearer. The company is placing more of its Reality Labs resources behind glasses and related devices, while recent sales figures cited in reporting indicate strong momentum for the category.
At the same time, the next phase of Ray-Ban AI glasses arrives under heavier scrutiny. Privacy allegations tied to how captured video may be processed and reviewed are adding pressure to a product segment that is expanding quickly. Taken together, the new filings suggest Meta is accelerating its smart-glasses roadmap while facing sharper questions about trust, disclosure and data handling.