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Apple Vision Pro 2 Reportedly Delayed to 2028 Ahead of WWDC

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Apple Vision Pro 2

If you were hoping Apple would use WWDC 2026 to unveil a Vision Pro 2, it may be time to reset expectations. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, in his Power On newsletter, said he doesn’t expect the next Vision Pro until 2028 at the earliest, building on Bloomberg’s earlier October 1, 2025 report, “Apple Shelves Vision Headset Revamp to Prioritize Meta-Like AI Glasses,” which detailed Apple pausing the headset overhaul to prioritize Meta-style AI smart glasses. Apple itself hasn’t announced any new Vision hardware for WWDC.

That’s a long runway, especially with the June 8, 2026 keynote just days away. For anyone tracking the Apple Vision Pro 2 release date, the practical answer is now closer to “sometime in 2028” than “WWDC.” And it would mean the current Vision Pro remains Apple’s flagship spatial-computing hardware for the foreseeable future.



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What Bloomberg’s Vision Pro 2 delay report actually says

The fresh wave of “Vision Pro 2” talk isn’t about a minor spec bump or a quiet component refresh; it’s about expectations for a true next-generation headset. Gurman’s reporting points to a much longer wait than many fans expected, with 2028 cited as the earliest plausible window for a major follow-up.

Because this is reporting based on Apple’s internal roadmap (not an Apple announcement), treat it as a signal rather than confirmation, especially right before WWDC, when rumor cycles tend to get amplified. Analyst Ming-Chi Kuo’s earlier 2025–2028 head-mounted roadmap has likewise pointed to a second-generation Vision Pro arriving no sooner than the second half of 2028, so the new Bloomberg timeline isn’t an outlier; it’s the consensus forming across multiple supply-chain sources.Apple Vision Pro 2

How this contradicts earlier 2026 / “M5 refresh” rumors

Earlier rumor rounds put a Vision Pro follow-up in a much nearer window, while others floated the idea of a chipset-based refresh rather than a full redesign. Apple did ship that smaller refresh: the Vision Pro with M5 chip and Dual Knit Band arrived in October 2025. But that internal update is what the “M5 Vision Pro” chatter was actually pointing at, not the true next-gen sequel many fans expected.




If the new 2028 timeline is accurate, those earlier predictions may have been:

  • Optimistic interpretations of early internal planning that later changed, or
  • Conflations between a “refresh” and a real sequel (two different things in Apple’s hardware playbook).

In other words: a small internal update could still happen sooner, but a Vision Pro 2, as most people mean it, may not.Apple Vision Pro 2

Vision Pro 2 rumors: what’s solid sourcing vs. what’s recycled

Vision Pro rumors have been a magnet for repetition. Once a single analyst note or supply-chain report lands, it tends to get paraphrased and republished as “new” across the web. When evaluating the current 2028 chatter, it helps to ask:

  • Is the outlet citing a specific analyst or named supply-chain thread?
  • Does the write-up add new detail (timing, component constraints, production milestones), or is it a rehash?
  • Is the claim consistent with Apple’s recent strategy of shipping a first-gen product, gathering developer momentum, and iterating slowly on expensive new categories?

Right now, the biggest takeaway isn’t a perfect date; it’s that the near-term Vision Pro 2 expectation looks increasingly unlikely.




Why the delay matters if you’re deciding whether to buy a Vision Pro

If you’ve been waiting because you assumed a Vision Pro 2 was imminent, a 2028 window changes the math. It implies:

  • You won’t be “obsolete” next year just because a sequel launched.
  • The current Vision Pro (and its ecosystem) is what Apple has to work with for multiple years.
  • The real question becomes whether software and content will mature fast enough to justify buying in before the hardware leaps again.

Of course, there’s still a practical downside: if Apple’s major hardware evolution is that far off, it may signal that first-gen constraints (cost, weight, battery, comfort, manufacturing yield) take longer to solve at scale.

Apple Vision Pro 2
Screenshot

The WWDC angle: what to realistically expect on June 8

There’s also a more immediate angle: WWDC 2026 is days away, and Apple’s keynote is typically where expectations get set for the year.

If a Vision Pro 2 isn’t coming, WWDC is still likely to matter for spatial computing, just in a different way. Instead of new headset hardware, the more realistic bets are:




  • visionOS 27 updates (performance, usability, developer tools)
  • New spatial features tied to Apple’s broader OS releases
  • Content and app partnerships that make the current Vision Pro more compelling

Bottom line: don’t expect a surprise Vision Pro 2 reveal at WWDC, but do expect Apple to keep investing in the platform, because it may be running with this generation longer than anyone originally thought.



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