Bad news for anyone waiting on Meta’s answer to the Apple Vision Pro. The company has officially hit the brakes on its next-gen mixed reality glasses – code-named Phoenix – delaying the launch from late 2026 to the first half of 2027.
Internal memos are floating around describing Phoenix as Meta’s most direct rival to Apple’s headset yet. But it looks like leadership at Reality Labs decided they needed more time to get it right rather than rushing a buggy product out the door.
What Happened & Why Meta Is Delaying Phoenix
Recommended VideosIn a message to the team, Reality Labs VP Maher Saba confirmed the new timeline, basically saying they need the extra months to make sure the quality and stability are actually there. Other execs, Gabriel Aul and Ryan Cairns, were even more blunt: the original schedule was “coming in hot,” and trying to hit it would have meant shipping a messy product with major user experience changes still in flux. They want “breathing room” to polish the details.
Phoenix itself sounds like a serious piece of kit. It’s got a goggle-like design that connects to an external computing puck. There was apparently a big internal debate about ditching the puck, but the engineers kept it to save weight on your face and keep the heat away from your head.
The delay also comes straight from the top. Mark Zuckerberg has been pushing the division to focus on quality and sustainability over just shipping things fast. Saba even warned teams not to use this extra time to bloat the project with new features – this is about fixing what’s there, not adding more.
Why It Matters, Why You Should Care & What’s Next
This shows just how hard it is to build high-end mixed reality hardware. With Apple’s Vision Pro already setting a crazy high bar, Meta knows it can’t afford to release a “good enough” product. It has to be excellent.
It also hints at the financial pressure cooker inside Meta right now. With reports of budget cuts hitting up to 30% at Reality Labs, the days of unlimited spending on the metaverse are over. They have to make this stuff viable, not just cool.
Meta
For you, it means we are stuck waiting a bit longer for Meta’s true flagship. Apple gets more time to build out its lead, and Meta’s lineup for the next year or two will likely feel like smaller, incremental steps rather than giant leaps.
What’s next: So, Phoenix is now an early-2027 story. But 2026 won’t be totally empty – Meta is planning a “limited edition” wearable code-named Malibu 2. Plus, early work is happening on a next-gen Quest headset that promises a huge upgrade for gamers.
They are also leaning hard into AI hardware, recently buying Limitless, a startup that makes AI-powered pendants. Between the new glasses, a refreshed Quest, and these new AI wearables, Meta is clearly trying to build a future that is a little more grounded and sustainable than its original metaverse pitch.