Smart glasses often chase add-ons like displays and cameras. Unlike, say, the Ray-Ban Meta, IXI is chasing a problem that hits a lot of people every day, seeing clearly when your eyes bounce between a phone, a laptop, and the world ahead. Its autofocus smart glasses are built to change focus in real time, and the company showed the concept at CES 2026.

For anyone living in the in-between zone of needing help up close and at a distance, the usual answer is bifocals or varifocals. Those can work well, but they can also lock you into a narrow sweet spot, especially for reading, plus blur toward the edges if your eyes drift out of the right area. Some people adapt quickly, others never really stop noticing it.

IXI’s goal is simpler to explain than most smart eyewear. Make the lens behave like it is always in the right place, instead of making you hunt for the right place in the lens.

The trick is gaze sensing

The glasses use eye tracking to figure out where you are looking, then adjust the liquid-crystal lenses to match. The frame relies on infrared components aimed at your eyes, reading reflections to estimate gaze direction. When you shift from far to near, the optics can bring in a reading correction. When you look back up, it can return to your distance setting.

Because the correction changes dynamically, the company argues you do not need large fixed zones dedicated to reading all the time.

The promise is comfort and clarity. If most of the lens can stay optimized for distance until you actually need close-up help, you may spend less time tilting your head, moving a screen around, or squinting through the edges.

Still, this is not a finished consumer product yet. The experience will live or die on how natural the transitions feel, especially in motion.

The roadmap and the caveats

IXI is targeting a launch within the next year, starting in Europe if it clears regulatory approval, then moving toward an FDA path for the US. It expects pricing above standard glasses at the high end. Early availability may also be narrow, with only a few frame styles and widths.

There are practical tradeoffs. The glasses need overnight charging through a hidden magnetic connection. The company also acknowledges edge distortions, and it says more testing is needed before it can call the system safe for driving, with a fallback mode that returns to a base lens state if something goes wrong. If you’re interested, the most useful next step is watching for real-world demos that include walking outdoors, night scenes, and driving studies, not just a controlled indoor test.

If you’re into augmented reality and smarter smart glasses, the best ones allow you to get prescriptions.

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