Oakley Meta HSTN AI smart glasses will be available in India starting next week. The new smart glasses, as per the company, are specifically designed for performance-centric eyewear designed for athletes, creators, and active users and blends Oakley’s sport-oriented design with Meta’s AI ecosystem, offering hands-free capture, real-time insights, and voice-enabled assistance in both English and Hindi. Check out the Oakley Meta HSTN AI smart glasses India price, availability and features below.
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Oakley Meta HSTN AI smart glasses India price and availability
Oakley Meta HSTN will go on sale in India starting Rs 41,800, with pre-orders live on Sunglass Hut. The collection will be available at major optical and eyewear retailers nationwide from December 1. Buyers will get access to six frame–lens combinations, all of which are prescription-ready.
The Oakley Meta HSTN AI smart glasses have a lightweight, sport-focused frame with Meta’s AI features. It has an integrated camera for hands-free photo and 3K video recording, open-ear speakers, and IPX4 water resistance. It also has a battery life of up to 8 hours of active use and 19 hours of standby, with a charging case providing an additional 48 hours of power.
Users will be able to activate Meta AI by saying Hey Meta to receive real-time updates on surf conditions, weather, and other topics. The glasses also support full Hindi interaction, thanks to Sarvam’s language tools. Meta is also introducing Celebrity AI Voice, with Deepika Padukone among the first English voice options.
The company is also testing a new feature called UPI Lite QR payments, which will allow users to scan and pay directly through their glasses by looking at a QR code and saying, “Hey Meta, scan and pay,” while using their WhatsApp-linked bank account.
The lineup includes six colour options: Warm Grey with Prizm Ruby lenses, Black with Prizm Polar Black, Brown Smoke with Prizm Deep Water, Transitions, and a Clear-lens variant.
Ashish Singh is the Chief Copy Editor at Digit. He's been wrangling tech jargon since 2020 (Times Internet, Jagran English '22). When not policing commas, he's likely fueling his gadget habit with coffee, strategising his next virtual race, or plotting a road trip to test the latest in-car tech. He speaks fluent Geek. View Full Profile