Vision Pro Travel Case Disappears From Apple’s International Stores

What You Need to Know
- Apple removed $199 Vision Pro Travel Case from online stores in UK, Japan, Germany, France, Ireland, Hong Kong.
- Vision Pro sold approximately 600,000 units total with flat consumer interest despite October 2025 M5 refresh.
- Apple canceled Vision Pro successor and Vision Air, redirecting focus toward smart glasses launching 2027 and 2029.
- Vision Products Group chief reassigned to lead Siri team, indicating shifted priorities away from headset development.
Apple pulling the $199 Travel Case from most international storefronts is a small logistical move, but it lands differently given everything else happening around Vision Pro right now.
The case has been removed entirely from Apple’s online stores in the UK, Japan, Germany, France, Ireland, and Hong Kong, with product pages deleted rather than marked out of stock. China and Australia still show listings, but the item is grayed out and unpurchasable. The US, Canada, and the UAE remain unaffected for now.
The timing fits a broader pattern of quiet retreat. The M5 refresh released in October 2025 did little to move the needle, with the $3,499 price unchanged and consumer interest still flat. Apple has sold roughly 600,000 Vision Pro units total, a number that looks modest against the scale of infrastructure Apple built around the product.
What Comes Next
Ming-Chi Kuo reported that incoming CEO John Ternus signed off on canceling both a second Vision Pro and the Vision Air, redirecting the company’s mixed-reality ambitions toward smart glasses. Two products are reportedly still alive: AI-equipped glasses to compete with Meta’s Ray-Bans, targeted for 2027, and a display-equipped AR glasses product unlikely before 2029. Vision Products Group chief Mike Rockwell has been running Apple’s Siri team since March 2025, which tells you where the priorities shifted.
Mark Gurman has left a small door open, suggesting a slimmer, cheaper headset remains a distant possibility, perhaps late 2028 or 2029 at the earliest. That caveat matters less than the near-term reality: the team that would build such a device has largely been reassigned.
Pulling a travel case from shelves is not a product cancellation. But when a company stops selling the bag designed to carry a device, it tends to reflect how confident that company is about people still wanting to carry it.
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