On Tuesday, June 16, Snap revealed SPECS — a standalone augmented reality eyewear device carrying a $2,195 price point. Pre-orders require a $200 refundable deposit, with shipments scheduled for fall 2025 throughout the United States, United Kingdom, and France.
The announcement triggered a stock increase exceeding 3%, although the company continues trading near seven-year lows with a market valuation hovering around $9.2 billion and share prices near the $5 mark.
Snap Inc., SNAP
The SPECS hardware incorporates dual Qualcomm Snapdragon chipsets — one dedicated to computer vision processing, the other handling augmented reality experiences — and operates completely independently without smartphone or external hardware requirements. Using proprietary liquid crystal on silicon display technology, the device delivers a 51-degree field of view. According to Snap, this translates to the equivalent of a 24-inch display for productivity tasks or a 115-inch screen when viewing video content.
Weighing between 132 and 136 grams depending on configuration, the frames are available in two size options, support prescription lens inserts, and provide up to four hours of continuous battery operation. With the included charging case, total battery life extends to 20 hours. The company has secured over 7,000 patents related to AR technology for this product.
The $2,195 price point deliberately excludes mainstream consumers. Instead, it’s designed for developers and technology early adopters — the creative community that will build the Lenses potentially driving adoption of more affordable future iterations. Snap reports that developers have already created hundreds of Lenses for the platform, following ten operating system updates and over 40 new features and APIs released during the past 18 months.
Meta commands approximately 70% of the smart glasses marketplace, having shipped roughly 3.5 million Ray-Ban units. The company’s Ray-Ban Display glasses launched in September 2025 with an $800 price tag, though they operate as heads-up displays rather than delivering complete AR functionality. Google and Samsung have showcased Android XR glasses prototypes, but display-equipped versions aren’t anticipated before 2027. Apple’s smart glasses entry isn’t projected until late 2026 at the earliest.
This timeline positions Snap ahead of three competitors, each valued at hundreds of times Snap’s current market capitalization — at least temporarily.
Market momentum continues accelerating. Industry projections for 2026 forecast AR smart glasses shipments climbing 85% year-over-year, surpassing 15 million units globally. Alternative forecasts predict growth from 6 million units in 2025 to 20 million in 2026.
Snap has committed over $3.5 billion to AR development across more than ten years. First quarter 2026 results showed revenue of $1.529 billion, marking 12% year-over-year expansion. The company’s “Other Revenue” category — primarily comprising Snapchat+ and Lens+ subscription services — surged 87% to $285 million.
B. Riley analyst Naved Khan maintained a Buy rating with a $10 price target on Snap prior to the launch, suggesting successful SPECS adoption could prove “transformative” and establish a growth opportunity currently absent from market valuations.
Snap has not yet achieved sustained profitability. While hardware quality hasn’t historically been its challenge — effective monetization has proven elusive.
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