A Finnish startup, ixi eyewear, has raised more than $40 million to create smart glasses with lenses that adjust focus based on eye movements. The lightweight prototype, weighing 22 grams, uses sensors and liquid crystal technology for instant adaptation. The company plans to launch the product within the next year, targeting the high-end eyewear market.
Finland-based ixi eyewear is innovating in everyday vision correction with smart glasses featuring adaptive lenses. The company has secured over $40 million in funding from investors, including Amazon, to develop this technology. Unlike augmented reality-focused smart glasses from companies like Meta and Google, ixi's product aims to enhance traditional eyewear for billions who need vision aids.
In late 2025, ixi unveiled a prototype weighing just 22 grams. It incorporates embedded sensors directed at the wearer's eyes and liquid crystal lenses that respond to gaze direction. "Powered by technology hidden within the frame that tracks eye movements and adjusts focus instantly—whether you're looking near or far," the company describes the autofocus mechanism.
ixi expects to release the glasses within the next year and has opened a waitlist on its website, though availability regions remain unspecified. CEO Niko Eiden acknowledged limitations in a CNN interview: "The center part is the sharp area, and then there is the edge where the liquid crystal stops and which is not that great to look into, but the center area is large enough that you can use that for reading. So, we do have our own distortions that we're introducing, but the majority of the time, they will not be visible."
Pricing will position the glasses at the high end of the market, according to Eiden. Similar efforts are underway by Japanese startups Elcyo and Vixion, with the latter offering a product featuring adaptive lenses in the lens center.
Optometrist Meenal Agarwal highlights challenges: "The engineering has to be reliable to have lenses shift focus fast, accurately, and invisibly without any lag or blurring. Battery life and power might (make it difficult) to keep the glasses lightweight and powered all day." She notes that while revolutionary, the concept builds on prior research, including Stanford's autofocal prototypes, but no consumer-ready lightweight versions exist yet.
This innovation could reduce reliance on bifocals or progressive lenses, offering a more natural viewing experience, though regulatory approvals and seamless integration remain hurdles.