Meta had reportedly cancelled its high-end mixed reality (MR) headset, news reports reavealed on Friday, citing sources familiar with the matter.

Speaking to The Information, the sources stated that the Menlo Park-based firm cancelled its plans to launch the headset, which would have debuted in 2027 to compete with the Apple Vision Pro.

Reuters cited the Information that the sources were two Meta employees.

Additionally, the tech giant’s Reality Labs division reportedly informed teams to cease development on the head-mounted display following a product review meeting.

Codenamed La Jolla, after a neighbourhood in San Diego County, California, the headset would have offered users ultra-high-resolutions with micro-OLED displays to compete with those in the Vision Pro.

Report authors Wayne Ma and Sylvia Varnham have also noted that the high cost of the micro-OLED displays have led to the cancellation.

Despite the news, Meta’s stocks rose around 0.16 percent to $532.69.

The development comes weeks after Meta filed several patents for eye-tracking, image sensory, light sourcing, and frame-tracking to upgrade their Quest family of headsets.

At the time, Apple Vision Pro sales had begun to decline dramatically, with Meta turning to its smart glasses and headset development ambitions.

A further Bloomberg report in July noted that the Apple Vision Pro had sold just over 100,000 units since opening for business in February.

D×M understands that Reality Labs may have binned the premium headset plans due to low demand from the Vision Pro. Meta’s mixed reality division may also aim to hold its commitment to a Year of Efficiency as cited in previous statements from Mark Zuckerberg, Founder and CEO, Meta.

4 responses to “Meta Bins Apple Vision Pro Rival Headset Plans — Sources”

  1. […] Friday last week, reports found that Meta employees leaked its premium mixed reality headset, slated for release in 2025 to rival the embattled Apple Vision Pro, would cease development, […]

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  2. […] announcement followed updates that it would no longer develop its Meta Quest Pro 2, a rival device to the Apple Vision Pro, due to expensive displays and low […]

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  3. […] is a complete pivot from its initial plans to develop a Quest Pro 2 device, which it scrapped last month due to poor sales from its rival headset, the Apple Vision […]

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  4. […] development (R&D) costs by recycling components, and it doesn’t need to spend money to develop the Quest Pro 2 and face potentially underwhelming returns on investment (ROIs) as seen with the Apple Vision […]

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