Hopes for a lighter and more affordable Apple Vision Pro are fading. According to a report, Apple's supplier Samsung Display is scaling back development of the necessary display – the project is expected to be officially discontinued internally by September. The reason lies in a clear shift in priorities.
For some time now, there have been expectations that Apple would release a cheaper, lighter model to complement its expensive mixed-reality headset in a few years. These plans now appear to be on hold. Instead, Apple is shifting its resources to where it sees the next major growth market: lightweight, everyday-wearable Apple Glasses, which are expected to launch in 2027. The recent news regarding display development is another piece of the puzzle in this realignment.
What the report states
According to the Korean tech publication The Elec, Samsung Display is reportedly ending work on a panel internally codenamed "G-VR." The project will be formally discontinued by September. This display was intended for a cheaper and lighter Vision Pro variant that Apple originally planned to release in the coming years.
The discontinuation explicitly affects only this one, more cost-effective display line. According to the report, Samsung will continue to develop high-resolution OLEDoS panels for Apple's own mixed reality devices – so the collaboration itself is not ending.
Glass substrate instead of silicon: the cost-saving trick
Behind "G-VR" lies a micro-OLED on a glass substrate – a more affordable alternative to the silicon-based OLEDoS (OLED-on-Silicon) used in the current Vision Pro. However, this cost advantage comes at a price: the glass substrate display was designed for approximately 1,600 to 1,700 pixels per inch, roughly half the 3,386 ppi achieved by today's Vision Pro.
This cheaper panel would have been the prerequisite for offering the headset at a significantly lower price. Mass production was reportedly planned for after 2028 – now development is ending before it has really gotten off the ground.
Why Apple is shifting its priorities
The cancellation fits into a trend that has been developing for months. Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman had already reported in October 2025 that Apple had paused work on a lighter, cheaper "Vision Air" in order to bring a smart pair of glasses in the style of Meta's Ray-Ban to market more quickly. In May 2026, he followed up: The cheaper device had been canceled altogether.
The core of the problem is personnel. A large portion of the mixed-reality hardware specialists are reportedly now working on smart glasses, which are expected to launch in 2027. A new device like the Vision Pro is therefore likely to be at least two years away. In short: Apple is focusing on lightweight glasses for the mass market – and postponing the development of an affordable headset.
What potential buyers gain from this
For those who were waiting for a more affordable Vision Pro, this is bad news. For now, the current Vision Pro, updated to the M5 chip in October 2025, remains the only option – and it's anything but a bargain. In the US, Apple recently raised the starting price from $3,499 to $3,699; in Germany, the headset has hovered around the €4,000 mark since its launch. An affordable entry into Apple's mixed reality world is therefore off the table for the foreseeable future.
From headset to glasses
The discontinuation of display development is, in itself, a minor detail in the supply chain – but in the bigger picture, it's a clear signal. Apple is reorganizing its wearable strategy and betting more heavily on lightweight glasses than on a more affordable headset. For now, the Vision Pro remains the premium flagship for a niche audience, while the real hope for the mass market now rests on the Apple Glasses. Whether this gamble pays off will become clear once the glasses actually launch in 2027. (Image: Shutterstock / BATKA)
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