Leak week rolls on. Screenshots of Samsung's unreleased Galaxy Glasses companion app surfaced today via SammyGuru, showing some yet unseen visuals of the Glasses' carrying case and more. The hardware shown is the Warby Parker-branded version, one of two frame partners Samsung is working with alongside Gentle Monster.

The charging case has an external status light for charging and pairing, and appears to charge the glasses wirelessly through contact points rather than a cable, a welcome step up from the physical pins on Ray-Ban Meta's case.

The app includes a section for managing photos and videos captured on the glasses, a settings menu, and a software update screen that shows "One UI XR" branding. One UI XR is Samsung's customized version of Android XR, Google's operating system for smart glasses and headsets, already running on the Galaxy XR headset. Since the Galaxy Glasses are audio-only with no display, it's not yet clear how much of One UI XR will be visible to users.

Strings buried in the app code hint at Galaxy Ring integration, with three references pointing to gesture controls that would let the ring start and stop functions on the glasses without touching the frame, similar to the Even R1 Smart Ring that works with its G2 line. Samsung's head of digital health separately confirmed last week that a next-generation Galaxy Ring is in development, though he wouldn't reveal timing or specs.

Earlier leaks from April put the glasses at a Qualcomm Snapdragon AR1 chip, a 12MP Sony camera with autofocus, a 155mAh battery, and around 50 grams. Price is rumored between $379 and $499, which competes directly with Ray-Ban Meta's range. None of those specs are confirmed by Samsung. A second model codenamed Haean, with a micro-LED display, is reportedly planned for 2027 at $600–$900.

Google and Samsung have both confirmed the glasses will ship before the end of 2026, with more details expected at the July 22 Unpacked event in London alongside the Galaxy Watch Ultra 2 and Galaxy Z Fold 8.