Meta AI smart glasses are the most talked-about gadget of June 2026 — a $299 AI-powered wearable that promises hands-free access to a personal AI assistant, a built-in camera, and real-time translation. But for consumers in Pakistan, the excitement comes with a significant asterisk. Official availability does not include Pakistan, and the country’s regulatory and import framework creates a steep wall between local tech enthusiasts and this next wave of AI wearables.
What Are the Meta AI Smart Glasses?
On June 23, 2026, Meta unveiled a brand-new in-house line of smart eyewear — simply called Meta Glasses — developed in partnership with EssilorLuxottica, the parent company of Ray-Ban. Unlike previous collaborations that carried Ray-Ban or Oakley branding, this is the first range to carry Meta’s own identity directly.
The collection launches with three frame styles: the Meta Adventurer, the bolder Meta Fury, and a slim oval design created with celebrity entrepreneur Kylie Jenner — all starting at $299. The Kylie Jenner edition is priced at $399 and even includes an AI-generated version of her voice as the on-board assistant.
Critically, the glasses are screen-free. They rely entirely on audio, a built-in camera, and voice interaction. Users speak to Meta AI — now powered by Muse Spark, the first model from Meta’s Superintelligence Labs — to ask questions, translate conversations in real time, capture photos and videos hands-free, and get pedestrian navigation directions. Battery life exceeds eight hours per charge, with the charging case adding up to 40 more hours.
Prescription, polarized, transition, and clear lens options are all available, making these genuinely wearable as everyday eyewear — not just a tech curiosity.
Why Meta AI Smart Glasses Are a Global Milestone
The timing and pricing are significant. Smart glasses shipments surged 167% in Q1 2026 compared to the same period in 2025, according to IDC, with Meta commanding roughly 69–80% of the entire market. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said the number of people using its glasses daily has tripled year-over-year. At $299, Meta is actively trying to move AI wearables from an enthusiast gadget into mainstream territory.
For context, the previous entry-level Ray-Ban Meta glasses cost $379, and the Ray-Ban Display model with a built-in lens screen launched at $799 last year. The new $299 price point is the lowest Meta has gone — and industry analysts at IDC expect the average selling price of smart glasses to fall further, from around $376 in 2026 to $229 by 2030 as competition heats up from Google, Samsung, and reportedly Apple.
For a deeper look at how Pakistan’s 5G infrastructure could eventually support connected wearables, see our explainer on Pakistan’s 5G launch and the fibre backhaul gap.
Where Are Meta AI Smart Glasses Available — and Where Isn’t Pakistan?
As of launch day, Meta Glasses went on sale in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, France, Italy, Germany, Spain, and Australia. Meta has indicated the product will expand to more markets later in the year — but no South Asian market, including Pakistan, India, or Bangladesh, is listed in the initial rollout.
This is not unusual. Meta’s existing Ray-Ban smart glasses were also never officially launched in Pakistan. There is no Meta retail or authorised distributor presence here, which means Pakistani consumers who want the device must either bring it back personally from abroad or attempt a grey-market import through forwarding services.
The PTA Approval and Import Cost Reality for Pakistan
This is where things get complicated. Under Pakistani law, all radio and telecommunications equipment — including devices that use Bluetooth or Wi-Fi — is subject to mandatory PTA Type Approval before it can be legally imported, marketed, or sold. The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority’s DIRBS system ensures that only type-approved and legal devices operate on mobile networks in the country. Devices that are not registered can be blocked from accessing local networks entirely.
Meta AI smart glasses use Bluetooth connectivity to pair with a smartphone, an open-ear audio system, and a wireless charging ecosystem — all of which fall under the category of radio frequency devices that require regulatory clearance. Since Meta has not applied for PTA type approval for these glasses in Pakistan, they exist in a legal grey zone for commercial import and retail sale.
For individual travellers bringing a personal unit back from abroad, the device can be registered for personal use — but commercial import and re-sale without type approval is not permitted. This is the same barrier that keeps many global tech wearables, including the Apple Watch Series, from having official local presence.
What Would a $299 Meta Glasses Cost in Pakistan?
Even if a consumer manages to import a pair personally or through a forwarding service, the landed cost in Pakistani rupees is substantially higher than the sticker price. Pakistan customs calculates duties on a CIF (Cost + Insurance + Freight) basis. For electronics and wearables imported from the US or EU, Pakistan Customs applies approximately 17% customs duty plus 19.5% sales tax on the declared value.
In 2026, the FBR further tightened the screws by issuing Valuation Ruling No. 2076/2026 — revised customs values specifically for premium smart wearable devices. Brands like Meta, which fall outside the standard three-tier category system alongside Apple, Samsung, and Google, are assessed separately by customs collectorates at higher-than-standard values under Section 25 of the Customs Act, 1969. Authorities introduced this framework after finding widespread under-invoicing of imported wearables at Pakistan’s customs checkpoints.
Taking the $299 base price, adding freight and insurance, applying the customs duty and sales tax stack, plus the weaker rupee (the PKR has faced significant depreciation pressure against the dollar in 2025-26), a rough landed cost for a Meta Glasses unit in Pakistan could easily exceed Rs 85,000 to Rs 100,000 — more than three times the nominal dollar price for many Pakistani consumers, and squarely in premium territory.
These import dynamics are consistent with trends seen in other hardware categories — as our coverage of the RAM and SSD price surge of up to 107% in Pakistan showed earlier this year.
Privacy, Competition, and What Comes Next
Meta AI smart glasses are not without controversy globally. The company has faced questions about the always-available camera, with documented cases of users filming others without consent. Meta says all its glasses include an LED indicator light that must be active when the camera is recording, and the camera is disabled if the LED is non-functional.
On the competitive side, Google is building AI smart glasses with Warby Parker powered by Gemini, Samsung is developing its own, and Snap launched a high-end AR pair at $2,195 just one week before Meta’s announcement. The smart glasses category is heating up fast — and prices are expected to keep falling.
For Pakistani consumers and the broader wearables market, the fundamental challenge is structural: without official market entry, PTA type approval filings by manufacturers, and a formal distribution channel, even an affordable $299 device remains out of comfortable reach for most.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I buy Meta AI smart glasses in Pakistan officially?
No. As of June 2026, Meta AI smart glasses are only officially available in the US, Canada, UK, Australia, and select European markets. There is no official Meta retail presence or authorised distributor in Pakistan. Meta has said the product will expand to more markets later in 2026, but no South Asian launch date has been announced.
Do Meta AI smart glasses need PTA approval to use in Pakistan?
Yes. Any wireless device — including Bluetooth and Wi-Fi connected wearables — requires PTA type approval to be legally sold or commercially imported in Pakistan. An individual traveller may bring one unit for personal use and register it, but commercial sale of unapproved devices is not permitted under PTA’s DIRBS framework.
How much would Meta AI smart glasses cost in Pakistan after import duties?
At a $299 base price, after Pakistan’s CIF-based customs duty (approximately 17%) and sales tax (19.5%), plus freight, currency conversion at current PKR/USD rates, and the FBR’s tightened valuation rules for premium wearable brands, the realistic landed cost could be anywhere between Rs 85,000 and Rs 100,000 or higher — making them a premium-tier product in the local market.
What makes Meta AI smart glasses different from regular smartwatches?
Unlike a smartwatch on your wrist, Meta AI smart glasses are worn as standard eyewear — screen-free, with open-ear speakers and a built-in camera. They use the Muse Spark AI model for real-time visual understanding, live language translation, hands-free photography, and conversational AI, all accessed through voice commands without needing to look at a screen.











