After bouncing around rumors and reports, the cheaper Vision Pro dream might be dead. We’ve seen delays, a supposed cancellation, and even a possible revival over the last couple of months. But a new supply chain report suggests it may finally be time to stop waiting.
Apple has reportedly suspended development of a lower-cost display intended for a lighter, more affordable Vision headset. Samsung Display plans to formally terminate the project in September, according to Korean outlet The Elec. Apple has made no public announcement about canceling the headset, although losing its purpose-built display makes an eventual launch look increasingly improbable.
The cost-cutting display is getting scrapped
Known within the industry as G-VR, the display project used micro-OLED technology built on a glass substrate. That would’ve helped lower manufacturing costs than the silicon-based OLEDoS screens found inside the current Vision Pro. Samsung Display was targeting a density of approximately 1,600 to 1,700 pixels per inch, roughly half the Vision Pro panel’s 3,386 PPI.
The cheaper screens were reportedly being considered for a more affordable Apple XR headset, with mass production previously expected sometime after 2028. The project apparently began winding down earlier in 2026, and industry sources revealed that Apple’s shift from XR headsets toward AI-powered smart glasses had drained the momentum behind the display. Although, Samsung Display will continue developing OLEDoS technology for other products, which suggests that the cancellation reportedly stems from Apple’s revised plans rather than a technical failure.

The writing was already on the wall
This is hardly the first sign that Apple’s cheaper headset has run into trouble. Bloomberg previously reported that Apple paused work on this wearable, reportedly codenamed N100, to accelerate development of smart glasses. A subsequent May 2026 report claimed that the cheaper headset had been canceled outright.
Keep in mind that this is still just an unconfirmed report. Furthermore, Apple still sells the M5-powered Vision Pro, complete with its 23-million-pixel display system and $3,499 starting price, so the existing headset remains alive for now.






