Travel tech is splitting in two directions: AI is being built into trip planning, navigation and wearables, while digital-detox devices and single-purpose gadgets gain traction among travelers seeking less screen time.
Google Maps' Gemini-powered Ask Maps and Apple's coming iOS 27 Visual Intelligence feature show how AI is being embedded into mainstream travel tools, even as guides report travelers arriving with fabricated chatbot-generated facts and even nonexistent destinations.
Smart glasses are the clearest hardware push: Snap's June-launched specs cost $2,195, Google is preparing Android XR glasses with Warby Parker and Gentle Monster, and Apple is targeting late 2027 for a rival device.
Those wearables promise translation, captions and hands-free navigation, but privacy worries and social stigma remain major obstacles, despite Meta saying its Ray-Ban glasses use a non-disableable capture LED and disable the camera if the light is blocked.
At the same time, products like the Light Phone III, the Commodore flip, compact cameras and e-readers reflect a broader travel shift toward utility-first tech that helps people disconnect from feeds and engage more directly with places they visit.