Apple wants you to step into a virtual world, while Snap wants you to stay in the real one. Here’s how their very different approaches to spatial computing compare.
The launch of Snap Specs at Augmented World Expo on June 16 is a big shift forward for the social company. After the previous effort of Snap Spectacles, Snap Specs are a step closer to the augmented reality future by being smart glasses with a built-in display.
This is something that brings Snap’s efforts in line with the Ray-Ban eyewear that Meta has produced, including its yet-to-ship Meta Ray-Ban Display. It’s also a massively different product from Apple’s own head-mounted computing device, the Apple Vision Pro.
This is what to take into account when comparing Snap’s Specs against the specs of Apple Vision Pro.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs – The utility elephant in the room
A comparison would normally launch into a spec-to-spec table and then break down each functional area. It’s not quite the comparison anyone really needs here.
The underlying thing here is that they are two wildly different products.
The Apple Vision Pro is a high-specification VR headset that does a very good job of pulling images from the real world and slotting 3D into that recreated existence. The Snap Specs are meant to give you a live view and then overlays graphics on top.
They are built in two wildly different ways, which affects practically every other element of the design. One is trying hard to be glasses with tech added to it, while the other completely ignores that idea at all.
The Specs are intended to be used in the real world. All by effectively behaving like a normal pair of spectacles, but with a few extra bits.
The Vision Pro is more a stay-at-home device that doesn’t invite you to wander around a town at all.
The purpose of each device varies considerably as well.
The Specs are more an ever-present assistive device, like having a nearby Siri at all times that can also play a movie. You have to choose to wear and the Apple Vision Pro, and even that’s for brief periods.
These two products represent opposing bets on what computing worn on the face should be. One asks you to enter a digital space, while the other layers digital information over the real one.
A more apt comparison would be comparing the Snap Specs against the long-rumored and still far away from launch Apple Glass. The frequently rumored smart glasses that, too, will eventually have some visual computing element to go with its first-wave cameras and sensors.
We don’t have the luxury of that sort of comparison, since Apple Glass doesn’t exist yet.
If we are to compare Snap and Apple’s approach to head-based computing devices, the Specs versus the Vision Pro is the nearest we can get for the moment.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs – Specifications
| Specifications | Apple Vision Pro (M5) | Snap Specs |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Mixed reality headset | Augmented reality glasses |
| Price | $3,499 | $2,195 |
| Availability | On sale now | Pre-order; ships fall 2026 |
| Display | Dual Micro-OLED, 23 million pixels total | Liquid crystal on silicon, see-through waveguide |
| Display type | Opaque (passthrough video) | Transparent (real-world view) |
| Colors | 92% DCI-P3 | 16 million colors |
| Field of view | Not published (approx. 100 degrees) | 51 degrees |
| Chip | Apple M5 + Apple R1 | Dual Snapdragon processors |
| Motion-to-photon latency | 12 milliseconds | 7 milliseconds |
| Lenses | Optional ZEISS optical inserts | Removable prescription inserts; electrochromic tint |
| Input | Eyes, hands, voice | Voice, hand tracking, gesture |
| Audio | Spatial Audio, dual driver array | Open-ear dual stereo speakers |
| Battery (general use) | Up to 2.5 hours | Up to 4 hours mixed use |
| Battery (with case) | N/A (external battery, tethered) | Up to 20 hours mixed use with charging case |
| Weight | 26.4-28.2 ounces (with band) | 4.7 ounces (132g) / 4.8 ounces (136g) |
| Operating system | visionOS 26 | Snap OS |
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs – Design and weight
The weight difference is the most immediate gap between these two products. It also explains almost everything else about how they are meant to be used.
Of the two, the Apple Vision Pro is the much larger, and heavier. Designed to cover the eyes, it takes the form of a large display that cuts off the outside world, like a really high-tech ski mask.
As such, the Vision Pro is quite heavy, coming in at between 26.4 and 28.2 ounces with its band.
By comparison, the Specs are extremely light at 4.7 ounces in the smaller 47mm size and 4.8 ounces in the larger 52mm size. That is roughly a sixfold difference.
The weight of the Apple Vision Pro stems from its aluminum construction, as well as glass and the choice of components. With an external display as well as an internal counterpart to consider, there’s a lot to fit into the design.
That doesn’t even include the battery, which is carried in your pocket and connected by a tether.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs: Specs try to look like normal wearable glasses.
The Specs are made from Swiss TR90 polymer, a lightweight material common in premium eyewear. They ship in two sizes to fit different face widths, since they have to accommodate a lot of head sizes.
The Vision Pro already does this as part of its design.
Both also rely on add-ons for people who usually wear glasses to correct their vision. Both accept Zeiss optical inserts to correct your vision.
However, the Specs version are arguably going to have more use, since the Specs are intended for everyday wear.
There’s also a big difference in the way each are worn.
The Vision Pro requires a fabric Light Seal and ships with a Dual Knit Band, which anchors the device to the front of your face. This also tries to reduce pressure, by using the second section of band.
As the Specs are literally a pair of glasses, they rest on your nose and are tucked behind your ears, just like a regular pair. Unlike the Vision Pro, there’s no standalone battery, as it’s already incoprorated into the design.
That said, the design of the Specs could do with a bit of a rethink.
The challenge of smart glasses is being able to fit all of the sensors, computing power, and the battery pack into one device, while still looking like a thin and minimal pair of spectacles.
This certainly isn’t the case with the Specs. With a chunky frame and arms, as well as thick sections at the tips behind the ear for the battery, you can tell there’s ample space for hardware to be included.
Perhaps some of the elements could’ve been offloaded. Snap could have let a smartphone handle processing instead of doing it locally, or tethering the battery in some way.
But doing that means you’d be sacrificing elements of the design for a better appearance, which would be arguably just as bad.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs – Display
This is where the two devices diverge most fundamentally. They are not trying to show you the same thing.
The Vision Pro uses dual Micro-OLED panels with 23 million pixels combined. It produces an opaque image, so you only see a rendered world in front of your eyes.
It looks like the real world, but it is reconstructed through passthrough cameras. Doing this allows the Vision Pro to place its AR 3D elements precisely in its simulated view.
Apple also has a second display on the outside of the Apple Vision Pro, called EyeSight. Using a generated form of the user, it displays the eyes looking in the same direction as the user’s own.
The intention is to inspire a connection between the users and others in the real world, using the eyes. Years later, it still feels a bit off-putting.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs: Specs display system, which can also take prescription lenses.
Specs have a different technique, due to relying on a real view of the real world. Rather than a full-blown screen, Specs use a see-through waveguide display built on liquid crystal on silicon technology.
The effect is that digital content floats on transparent lenses in front of the user’s eyes, with the real world visible directly through them.
It’s a proprietary technology, and Snap doesn’t say how high the resolution is at all.
Snap quotes a 51-degree field of view for Specs. Apple does not publish a field of view figure, though independent measurements place the Vision Pro around 100 degrees.
These numbers are not directly comparable. A transparent waveguide and an opaque passthrough display measure field of view on different terms and for different reasons.
The gap is not a like-for-like advantage.
While you can block out the real world with the Apple Vision Pro, you can’t do the same with Specs.
You can’t cover the edges of the glasses so you just have a view of the display. Unless you want to get really creative with tape and foam.
Spec’s counter is an adaptive tint. Electrochromic lenses shift from clear to tinted in about 10 seconds. All using technology Snap compares to Boeing 787 Dreamliner windows.
This is basically similar to photochromic or Transitions lenses, except they are activated by electricity instead of the sun.
Here, it’s less to protect your eyes and more to protect your privacy. A dark screen means what’s on display won’t be as easily viewed by external observers.
They won’t see you glaring at your portable screen either.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs – Processing
The chips reflect each device’s purpose. They are not built to do the same job.
The Vision Pro runs the Apple M5, a desktop-class chip, alongside the dedicated R1 sensor processor. The R1 handles camera and sensor data with 12-millisecond photon-to-photon latency.
It is basically a MacBook Pro in a practically hands-free form factor, with extra hardware added to the mix.
That extra hardware is extensive, as it has to deal with two high-resolution main cameras, six world-facing tracking cameras, and four eye-tracking cameras. There’s also a TrueDepth camera, LiDAR, and four inertial measurement units for good measure.
Then there’s the audio, which combines a six-mic array with directional beamforming and speakers near the ears. Or you could use a low-latency connection with AirPods Pro 2, AirPods 4, or later models.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs: Two Snapdragon chips drive the Specs
Specs also goes down the dual-chip approach, by using two Snapdragon processors. One is dedicated to computer vision, and the other runs Snap’s Lenses, the augmented reality experiences built for the platform.
Snap doesn’t say exactly what the chips are, and there’s no real way to benchmark the two. But Snap insists that they are optimized for “low-latency world understanding” and have “power-efficient intelligence.”
There’s no word on what sensors Snap is including, though a pair of front-facing cameras are visible in the launch imagery.
Snap quotes a 7-millisecond motion-to-photon latency for Specs. This is lower than the Vision Pro’s 12-millisecond figure, which is still quite impressive considering it is also making an in-headset recreation of your environment.
Either way, the lower latency suits transparent AR, where digital overlays must track tightly against the real world.
As for the experience, the M5 is built for rendering dense virtual environments and running visionOS apps. The dual Snapdragons are tuned for low-power, all-day world tracking and lightweight overlays.
The chip choices certainly reflect the expected experience of each head-mounted device.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs – Battery
Battery life follows directly from the form factor. Each device makes a different compromise.
The Vision Pro lasts up to 2.5 hours of general use, extending to three hours for video playback. It draws power from an external battery connected by cable, which saves you from having more weight added to an already heavy headset.
Specs offer up to four hours of mixed-use battery in a fully standalone design. There is a charging case that adds four more charges, for up to 20 hours of mixed use away from a wall.
Mixed use here means a combination of audio and video playback, the use of Lenses, AI assistance, and Bluetooth notifications from connected devices. Based on how you would use it in the real world, your mileage will vary.
Of course, you can also connect a charging cable to a five-pin interface on the side of the Specs, if you want to use them while at rest. You can even switch from the charging cable to a USB-C streaming cable, if you want to use them as a Mac or game console display.
The practical difference is mobility. Specs are built to leave the house with, while the Vision Pro is built to use in one place.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs – AI and software
Both devices lean on artificial intelligence, but apply it differently. The transparency of Specs changes what AI can do.
Specs run Snap OS, with AI that can see what the wearer sees through the glasses. Guidance can appear over real objects, such as directions on a street or instructions on a task in front of you.
Display panels with information appear in front of you, ready to pinch or manipulate, while still allowing you to see the environment behind it. All in an AR view where the elements appear to be floating in place in relation to the world.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs: The Specs use a transparent waveguide to show an image.
If you’re using it for navigation, you’re also not necessarily going to have to deal with notifications right in the center of view.
Snap’s promotion includes experiences for navigation where you switch between a front-and-center view to select a destination. A top-of-screen interface with a minimap is used when you actually try to get there.
The Vision Pro runs visionOS 26 with Apple Intelligence. Its AI operates within the headset’s apps and passthrough view rather than as an always-on overlay on the open world.
That said, there’s still a lot of AI smarts on the horizon in visionOS 27. The new Siri AI is a big part of the operating system, with users able to look at an object and ask Siri directly about it using Visual Intelligence.
Snap leans heavily on its developer platform. It says hundreds of Lenses already exist for Specs, with agentic development tools rolling out in Claude Code, Codex, and Cursor to help build more.
Its initial discussion about AI draws on the possibilities of the technology, and similar concepts like asking queries based on what the user can see. However, it errs towards developers building experiences that can best use it, rather than a definitive AI tech in its own right.
The Vision Pro has a growing but still limited visionOS app catalogue despite being out for a few years. Major third-party apps remain absent, though it benefits from deep integration across Apple’s ecosystem.
The software philosophies also mirror the hardware. Snap wants quick, contextual overlays on the real world to nudge the user in the right direction, while Apple wants a rich computing environment you step into.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs – Privacy
Both companies address privacy, and Specs raise a specific concern that headsets do not. That is, the see-through device worn in public can more easily record those nearby.
I say “more easily,” as both devices have external camera systems. The difference is that you’re probably going to actually wear the Specs in public.
Specs include an LED indicator that lights up when recording. Snap says the glasses prioritize on-device processing and ask before accessing sensitive information.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs: There’s a charging case available for the Specs.
The privacy question matters more for Specs precisely because they are worn out in the world. Snap has made the recording indicator a visible part of the design for that reason.
The Apple Vision Pro also has its own external indicator, thanks to a flashing white Eyesight display. That is, if the user’s virtual eyes staring at you isn’t enough of a clue that you’re being watched in the first place.
The Vision Pro is largely used in private settings, so bystander recording is less of a daily concern. It uses Optic ID, an iris-based biometric system, to secure the device.
Then there’s Apple’s history of ensuring its apps and those of third parties maintain security and privacy at all times. This is a company-wide initiative that it has worked on for years, and therefore it’s naturally part of the Vision Pro experience, too.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs – Pricing
The Vision Pro costs $3,499 for the 256GB model and is on sale now. Storage upgrades raise the price further.
Specs cost $2,195 and are available for pre-order with a $200 refundable deposit. They are expected to ship this fall in the United States, the United Kingdom, and France.
Specs are around $1,300 cheaper than the Vision Pro at entry. Prescription inserts for Specs cost extra and ship separately through a third-party partner, which is the same for the Vision Pro.
Both are expensive devices for early adopters. Neither is priced as a mass-market product yet.
Apple Vision Pro (M5) vs Snap Specs – Which to buy
These two devices are not really competing for the same purchase. The right choice depends on what kind of face-worn computing a person actually wants.
The Vision Pro is the device for immersion. It delivers the best display in any headset, desktop-class power, and a rich spatial computing environment for media, work, and apps.
It is heavy, tethered, and expensive. That suits focused use in one place rather than all-day wear.
Specs are the device for presence. They are light enough to wear for hours, fully standalone, and designed to keep the wearer engaged with the real world while AI assists in the moment.
The transparent display cannot match the Vision Pro’s image richness, partly because the real world continues to seep through. The experience also depends heavily on what developers build, and that’s not been in a big way for the Vision Pro thus far.
Anyone wanting the most powerful spatial computer for immersive media and serious work will choose the Vision Pro. Anyone wanting lightweight, all-day glasses that augment the real world rather than replace it will choose Specs.
The deeper point is that these are different bets on the future of spatial computing, taking advantage of currently available technology.
The answer could well be very different when Apple brings out its own smart glasses. But it will do so while giving rivals like Snap and Meta’s Ray-Bans a first-to-market advantage.
It’s an advantage that Apple can’t really afford to give up.
Where to Buy Apple Vision Pro (M5) and Snap Specs
The Apple Vision Pro can be ordered directly from Apple, with a starting price of $3,499.
If you’re looking to save on the headset, though, it’s worth checking eBay.com for pre-owned and open box listings.
Snap Specs, meanwhile, start at $2,199 and can be ordered directly at Specs.com.








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