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January 21, 2026

CES 2026: The State of the Art in AR Glasses for Logistics

CES 2026 marked an important shift for AR glasses—momentum is moving from consumer concepts toward enterprise and logistics use cases.

5 min read

CES 2026 marked an important shift for AR glasses. What was once dominated by consumer entertainment and “screen-on-your-face” concepts is now beginning to show real momentum toward enterprise and logistics use cases.

Across the show floor, multiple vendors demonstrated hardware choices that align with the realities of logistics operations: long shifts, hands-free work, constant movement, and the need for reliable, glanceable information rather than immersive experiences.

Notable Directions from CES 2026

A few devices stood out as indicators of where enterprise AR is heading:

  • Vuzix Ultralite Pro highlighted a workforce-first approach with lightweight waveguides, on-device processing, and integrated cameras—features that map directly to task guidance, verification, and remote support in logistics environments.
  • INMO Air 3 emphasized fully wireless operation and practical input methods, reinforcing the idea that AR glasses must function as wearable terminals, not secondary displays.
  • Cellid HJ1 reference designs showed that the supply chain for enterprise AR is maturing, with optics and manufacturing now capable of supporting scalable, purpose-built devices.
  • TCL RayNeo X3 Pro pointed toward standalone “computer glasses,” signaling a move away from phone-tethered designs and toward more autonomous devices suitable for logistics operations.
  • Solos AirGo V2 took a camera-first approach, underscoring the importance of documentation, live support, and proof workflows alongside visual guidance.

Device snapshot

A simple overview of notable AR glasses shown (or discussed) around CES 2026, with positioning and standout specs.

CompanyProductEst. Release / AvailabilityPricePositioned ForNotable Specs / Features
XREALXREAL 1SAvailable now (Jan 2026)$449Productivity & Entertainment1200p/eye, 52° FOV, 16:10, on-device 2D→3D conversion
ASUS × XREALROG XREAL R1H1–H2 2026TBDGaming Focus240Hz, 1080p HDR, ~57° FOV, depth sensors for screen pinning
TCL RayNeoRayNeo Air 4 ProJan 25, 2026$299Private CinemaHDR10, 1200 nits, 120Hz, ~76g, specialized image chip
RokidRokid AI Glasses StyleAvailable now$299–$599AI Camera/Voice Assistant12MP camera, real-time translation; (No display-first focus)
XGIMIMemoMind OneEarly 2026~$599AI Note-taking / HUDMulti-LLM hybrid OS; translation/teleprompter
Even RealitiesEven G2Available nowFrom $599Minimalist HUD / PrivacyNo camera; lightweight (~36g), monochrome HUD display
VuzixUltralite ProTBDTBDEnterprise / WorkforceBinocular waveguides, Qualcomm AR1, <80g, no “eye glow”
LoomosLoomos AI GlassesNot specifiedTBDAI Smart Glasses16MP camera; swappable battery + neckband power bank
VITUREThe BeastFeb 2026$549High-FOV Media~58° FOV, 120Hz, electrochromic tint, spatial camera
TCL RayNeoRayNeo X3 ProLate 2026$1,099Standalone AR AssistantDual micro-LED, high brightness, 6DoF, eSIM support
SolosAirGo V2Early 2026$299Camera + AI16MP camera; live streaming; swappable battery temples
CellidHJ1 AI Smart GlassesShowcase onlyTBDManufacturing ReferenceMicro-LED; integrated eye tracking module
Zepp (Amazfit)Helio GlassesPrototype / 2H 2026TBDSports HUDLightweight concept for athlete data overlays
LLVisionLeion Hey2Showcase onlyTBDEnterprise Translation100+ languages, low latency, noise-canceling array
INMOINMO Air 3H1 2026TBDWireless All-in-OneWireless 1080p waveguide; touch pad + control ring
MojieStylish AR Ref. DesignReference DesignN/ALightweight Daily Wear~25g; resin diffractive waveguide (Award Winner)
MojieFull-Feature AR+AIReference DesignN/ALightweight AI Wear~38g; resin diffractive waveguide + AI processing

Key Takeaways

  • AR glasses are no longer only consumer products; enterprise value is now clearly on the roadmap.
  • The focus is shifting toward comfort, reliability, hands-free use, and integration with real workflows.
  • Cameras and on-device processing are becoming core requirements, not optional features.
  • Most solutions are still early and require validation in real logistics environments.

Where the Market Is Going Next

CES 2026 showed that companies are beginning to take enterprise and logistics use cases seriously, but the market is still in its early stages. The next phase will be defined less by new hardware announcements and more by real deployments that prove performance, scalability, and ROI.

For logistics, the opportunity is clear: AR glasses that reliably support workers on the floor can reduce errors, speed up operations, and improve visibility. The challenge now is ensuring these devices perform consistently in real-world conditions, shift after shift.