Skip to main content

How Apple plans to save the Vision Pro

A person wearing an Apple Vision Pro headset.
Digital Trends

It’s no secret that Apple’s Vision Pro headset is the best advanced headset on the market, with powerful specs and an immersive experience that no rival can truly match. It’s also no secret that Apple has struggled to sell its device, given its $3,499 price tag puts it way out of reach of most consumers. Apple reportedly has a plan to turn things around, though — yet it might not involve a Vision Pro headset at all.

According to the latest Power On newsletter from Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman, Apple plans to launch a cheaper Vision Pro in late 2025 at the earliest, followed by a second-generation mainstream Vision Pro around late 2026. After that is a set of much-discussed augmented reality (AR) glasses, although Gurman believes these are still many years away.

Recommended Videos

Yet there are problems with the first two products in that roadmap. The cheaper Vision Pro will have to make significant cuts to bring the price down, but doing so might make it lose the “technological advances that made the Vision Pro superior to the competition,” Gurman says.

The Vision Pro 2, meanwhile, is unlikely to be a major change from the original model and thus might suffer from the same pitfalls: a high price and an overly niche appeal. Work on that one has reportedly been discontinued for now to focus on the cheaper model.

An Apple Vision Pro demo unit on a desk in an Apple Store.
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

The AR glasses, on the other hand, could seriously shake things up. They are the “holy grail for the tech industry,” Gurman believes, with the journalist adding: “That product seems to have the most promise for augmenting — and perhaps ultimately replacing — the iPhone.”

Augmented reality glasses also fit in with Apple’s long-held desire to have its technology recede into the background so that the experience can shine — something that both Steve Jobs and Jony Ive obsessed over. People don’t buy a VR headset for the device itself; they buy it for the experience.

That’s something a lightweight pair of glasses would be able to achieve so much more easily than the current bulky, heavy Vision Pro. If Apple can realize that dream, it might be the shot in the arm its VR products desperately need, reigniting interest in the Vision Pro while offering the purest example of what Apple initially set out to achieve with its VR and AR devices.

What’s the solution?

Apple iGlasses
Apple

While AR glasses may be the product that saves the Vision Pro, Gurman raises questions over whether Apple has the stomach for the fight. “The big question,” Gurman says, “is whether Apple is willing to invest hundreds of millions of dollars annually developing new technologies for future headsets and glasses — with little prospect for a near-term payoff.”

It will require patience in an industry not exactly known for this quality. Even Apple, which has more funds and patience than most, might not have the endurance for it — just look at the now-canceled Apple Car, a project that Apple poured over $10 billion into without anything to show for it.

That said, Gurman doesn’t seem too worried: “Given that the Vision Products Group has thousands of employees and continues to hire, my sense is that Apple is willing to keep spending for another several years or so. That would let it at least prove whether the AR glasses are feasible.”

A man wears an Apple Vision Pro headset.
Apple

It seems unlikely that Apple would give up its cherished AR dream easily, especially when so much money has already been spent on research and development (and when so much money stands to be made if the product is successful). When realizing the Vision Pro’s original ideas might come down to the AR glasses, there’s a huge amount at stake for Apple.

But with these glasses still many years away, the short-term key for Apple is the cheaper Vision Pro. Here, the company can take solace (and learn lessons) from its past efforts. The iPhone needed the App Store and faster 3G connectivity to really take off, while the Apple Watch had to be refocused on health and fitness before it became a success story. Now, some people may be looking at the Vision Pro in the same way.

Does the Vision Pro need to be refocused? Does Apple simply need to bring the price down? Or do the mooted AR glasses need to finally arrive on the scene? Only time will tell what the solution is, but one thing is for sure: the AR glasses can’t come quickly enough.

Alex Blake
Former Computing Writer
Alex Blake has been working with Digital Trends since 2019, where he spends most of his time writing about Mac computers…
The performance downgrade made to the M4 Pro that no one is talking about
Someone using a MacBook Pro M4.

I've spent this whole week testing the new M4 chip, specifically the M4 Pro in both the Mac mini and 16-inch MacBook Pro. They are fantastic, impressive chips, but in my testing, I noticed something pretty surprising about the way they run that I haven't seen others talk much about. I'm talking about the pretty significant change Apple made in this generation to power modes.

First off, Apple has extended the different power modes to the "Pro" level chips for the first time, having kept it as an exclusive for Max in the past. The three power modes, found in System Settings, are the following: Low Power, Automatic, and High Power. The interesting thing, however, is that in my testing, the Low Power drops performance far more this time around.

Read more
Apple faces challenges with bringing OLED to the MacBook Air
The MacBook Air on a white table.

A report from Korean outlet The Elec suggests the OLED MacBook Air that Apple was allegedly planning to release in 2027 could face significant delays. While progress for the OLED MacBook Pro seems to be going smoothly, the price increase caused by the new display technology is a much bigger problem for the budget MacBook Air models.

One of the biggest selling points of the MacBook Air is its lower price, making it great for first-time Mac buyers, students, and anyone else who doesn't expressly need the power of a Pro. While price increases are a natural part of the tech industry, the slightly disappointing sales of the 2024 OLED iPad Pro suggest that a new display simply isn't enough of an incentive for consumers to justify a higher price tag.

Read more
Is the M4 Mac mini Apple’s first true gaming PC?
Mac Mini with M4

The M4 Mac mini made its big splash last week. Among the normal Apple marketing content, however, I noticed something I'd never seen before. It's the image above that I'm talking about -- and by now, you've probably noticed the same thing that caught my eye. The PS5 controller.

Sure, you've always been able to connect up a game controller and use it for Mac gaming, but never have I seen it promoted by Apple itself. By putting this so forward in the marketing materials, Apple is not-so-subtly implying that these are PCs that are at least to some degree built for gaming. Is this Apple's first true attempt at taking a real step into the world of PC gaming? There's more evidence than you might think.
Building momentum

Read more