Best AI Wearables for iPhone Users in 2026
Not all AI wearables work with iPhone. Here are the ones that do — and which ones to avoid if you're an iPhone user.
The iPhone Compatibility Problem
If you have an iPhone, your AI wearable options are more limited than you might think. The biggest issue: the Samsung Galaxy Ring only works with Samsung Galaxy phones — it won't pair with an iPhone at all. Other AI wearables have varying levels of iPhone compatibility.
This guide covers the AI wearables that work well with iPhone, those that work but with limitations, and those to avoid entirely.
Best AI Wearables for iPhone Users
Best overall smart ring for sleep & recovery tracking in 2026.
Best AI smart glasses of 2026 — 2x battery, 3K video, on-board Meta AI.
Premium version with InstantView screen and 2x battery life.
Best smart ring for sleep apnea detection — no subscription, ever.
Best OTC hearing aid of 2026 — Bose sound tuning, self-fitting.
Premium 152-inch 1200p display with myopia adjustments.
Smart Rings for iPhone
Oura Ring 4 — Best Overall for iPhone
The Oura Ring 4 ($349 + $5.99/month) is the best smart ring for iPhone users. The Oura app is fully featured on iOS, syncs seamlessly with Apple Health, and the ring works perfectly with iPhone. The $5.99/month subscription is the only downside.
RingConn Gen 2 — Best No-Subscription for iPhone
The RingConn Gen 2 ($299, no subscription) is the best no-subscription alternative for iPhone users. It works perfectly with iOS, syncs with Apple Health, and offers sleep apnea detection that Oura lacks.
Samsung Galaxy Ring — NOT COMPATIBLE
The Samsung Galaxy Ring only works with Samsung Galaxy phones. If you have an iPhone, this is not an option.
Smart Glasses for iPhone
Meta Ray-Ban Skyler Gen 2 — Works Great with iPhone
The Meta Ray-Ban Skyler Gen 2 ($329) works great with iPhone. The Meta View app is fully featured on iOS, and the glasses pair via Bluetooth just like AirPods. AI queries work seamlessly.
Viture Luma Pro — Works with iPhone 15+
The Viture Luma Pro ($549) works with iPhone 15 and later (which have USB-C DisplayPort output). For older iPhones with Lightning ports, you need a Lightning-to-USB-C adapter.
Razer Anzu — Works with iPhone
The Razer Anzu ($199) works fine with iPhone via Bluetooth. No compatibility issues.
AI Pins for iPhone
Plaud Note Pro — Excellent with iPhone
The Plaud Note Pro ($209) works excellently with iPhone. The Plaud app is well-designed on iOS, and the device connects via Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.
Rabbit R1 — Companion App on iPhone
The Rabbit R1 ($199) has a companion app on iOS for setup and limited configuration. Most interaction happens on the device itself.
Hearing Aids for iPhone
All major OTC hearing aids work with iPhone:
- Lexie B2 Plus — Excellent iOS app with Bluetooth streaming
- Jabra Enhance Plus — Works great with iPhone, supports hands-free calls
- Sony CRE-E10 — Compatible with iPhone via Sony Hearing app
VR/MR Headsets for iPhone
The Meta Quest 3 works with iPhone via the Meta Horizon app (for setup, social features, and notifications). The headset itself doesn't pair with iPhone for content — it's a standalone device.
The Apple Vision Pro ($3,499) is designed specifically for iPhone users — it's the most integrated VR/MR headset for the Apple ecosystem. But the price makes it a niche product.
AI Wearables iPhone Users Should Avoid
- Samsung Galaxy Ring: Only works with Samsung Galaxy phones — won't pair with iPhone at all
- Some Samsung-specific wearables: Anything requiring Samsung Health won't work with iPhone
Final Recommendations for iPhone Users
For iPhone users, the AI wearable stack we recommend:
- Smart ring: Oura Ring 4 (best overall) or RingConn Gen 2 (no subscription)
- Smart glasses: Meta Ray-Ban Skyler Gen 2
- AI pin: Plaud Note Pro
- Hearing aid: Lexie B2 Plus (if needed)
- VR/MR headset: Meta Quest 3 (or Apple Vision Pro if budget allows)
Avoid the Samsung Galaxy Ring — it's the only major AI wearable that doesn't work with iPhone.
Frequently Asked Questions
No — the Samsung Galaxy Ring only works with Samsung Galaxy phones running Android 11+. It does not work with iPhone or non-Samsung Android phones. If you have an iPhone, choose Oura Ring 4 or RingConn Gen 2 instead.
For iPhone users, the Oura Ring 4 ($349 + $5.99/month) is the best smart ring — it has the most polished iOS app and syncs with Apple Health. For a no-subscription alternative, the RingConn Gen 2 ($299) works perfectly with iPhone and offers sleep apnea detection.
Yes — the Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses work great with iPhone. The Meta View app is fully featured on iOS, and the glasses pair via Bluetooth just like AirPods. AI queries work seamlessly. iPhone compatibility is not an issue.
Yes — FSA/HSA eligibility is device-dependent, not phone-dependent. OTC hearing aids (Lexie, Jabra, Sony) qualify with a Letter of Medical Necessity. Smart rings may qualify with an LMN for a specific medical condition. Smart glasses, AI pins, and VR headsets generally don't qualify.