The current flagship product is XRAI AR2, a dedicated pair of captioning glasses that replaces the company’s earlier AR One model At $699, it is designed as an all-day captioning-glasses system with real-time captions, translation, offline mode, and optional cloud-enhanced transcription.
AR2 is substantially different from earlier tethered smart-glass approaches. The glasses are wireless, weigh 1.7 oz, include three built-in microphones for 360° voice capture, and use a dual-lens display so captions appear in both eyes. XRAI says the glasses provide 8+ hours of battery life, while the charging case can provide up to 12 additional recharges, or up to 96 hours of total use. The glasses still need to be paired with an iOS or Android phone within Bluetooth range, with speech-to-text processing handled on the phone to keep the glasses lighter and more power-efficient.
A key distinction is that XRAI can work both as a glasses-based system and as an app. The XRAI Glass app is available for iOS and Android and can be used without smart glasses, allowing users to see captions on a phone or tablet. With compatible AR glasses, the same app can display captions in the wearer’s field of view.
XRAI now offers a free Essentials tier for basic offline captioning. According to the company, Essentials includes unlimited basic transcription minutes, support for 20 languages, up to 30-minute conversations, and no internet requirement. XRAI recommends its cloud-enhanced transcription engines for faster and more accurate captioning, particularly in noisy or more complex listening environments.
Paid plans add more advanced features. XRAI’s Premium plan is listed at $15/month and includes 600 monthly “pro” transcription minutes, enhanced captioning accuracy, translation, and unlimited conversation lengths. The Ultimate plan is listed at $30/month and adds higher-level pro features such as multilingual translation, automatic language detection, and speaker identification. The AR2 includes 3,600 pro minutes with purchase, which users can apply when they need cloud-enhanced performance.
For people with hearing loss, the most important point is that XRAI AR2 does not necessarily require a continuing subscription for basic captioning, but many of the features that make the system more powerful—like cloud-enhanced accuracy, translation, speaker identification, and longer or more complex conversations—may depend on pro minutes or a paid plan.
Beyond one-on-one use, XRAI has been expanding into venues and public spaces through XRAI Stream, a platform that can send live captions and translations from a local audio source to phones, desktops, screens, or smart glasses. XRAI says Stream can be used for events, classrooms, workplaces, theaters, sports venues, and travel announcements.
As with all captioning glasses, performance will depend on the listening environment, microphone pickup, speaker distance, accents, background noise, and the transcription model being used. Users should also review XRAI’s privacy and subscription policies carefully, especially if they plan to record, save, translate, summarize, or share conversation transcripts.