Qualcomm is laying the groundwork for the next generation of XR hardware with two announcements that target both the brains inside future headsets and the tools needed to build them.
At Augmented World Expo 2026, the company unveiled Snapdragon Reality Elite, its new flagship XR platform designed for devices running Android XR and other mixed-reality experiences. Qualcomm also introduced Snapdragon START, a new initiative aimed at helping brands bring AI-powered smart glasses and wearable devices to market more quickly.
Snapdragon Reality Elite puts AI at the center of XR
Replacing Snapdragon XR2+ Gen 2 at the top of Qualcomm’s XR lineup, Snapdragon Reality Elite delivers substantial performance gains across the board. Qualcomm says the platform offers up to 60% faster graphics performance, a 30% CPU uplift, and a massive jump in AI capabilities with 48 TOPS of NPU performance. Those gains are intended to power increasingly sophisticated XR experiences, including photorealistic avatars, on-device AI assistants, and advanced 3D content creation tools. Qualcomm says the chip can process more contextual information in real time, helping virtual experiences respond more naturally to a user’s surroundings.
The platform also introduces a dedicated Engine for Visual Analytics (EVA) block to accelerate computer vision tasks. That should improve features such as depth estimation and enhance the accuracy of hand and head tracking. On the visual front, Snapdragon Reality Elite supports displays with resolutions up to 4.4K per eye at 90 frames per second. Qualcomm is also promising lower-latency video passthrough and improved image quality, helping digital objects blend more naturally into the real world.
Qualcomm wants to make smart glasses easier to build
Performance isn’t the only focus. Qualcomm says the Reality Elite can deliver up to 20% longer battery life than its predecessor while operating up to 12 degrees Celsius cooler under load. The chip is designed for a wide range of XR hardware, from standalone headsets to tethered devices with optical or video see-through capabilities. The first announced product powered by the platform is XREAL’s upcoming Project Aura headset. Alongside the chip, Qualcomm launched Snapdragon START, short for Scalable Turnkey AI-Ready Toolkit. The program combines hardware modules, software frameworks, cloud connectivity tools, and white-label device designs to simplify the development of smart glasses and future AI wearables.

The idea is to reduce the engineering hurdles required to launch AI-powered devices. Whether companies are building audio-only smart glasses, display-equipped wearables, or entirely new personal AI gadgets, Qualcomm wants to provide much of the foundation before development even begins. These announcements show Qualcomm pushing beyond processors and toward becoming a one-stop shop for the emerging Android XR ecosystem.






