Refurbished Viture Luma Pro smart glasses drop to $271 on eBay
A refurbished Viture Luma Pro costs about $271 with eBay’s LONGWEEKEND code, versus roughly $399 to $419 new. The discount tests how far price can push smart glasses mainstream.

Smart glasses still sit in a high-friction part of consumer tech: interesting enough to tempt buyers, but often priced above what most people want to risk on a first try. That is why a certified-refurbished Viture Luma Pro at about $271 on eBay matters. The official VITURE store is selling the units as Certified - Refurbished, with eBay saying they are professionally inspected, cleaned and refurbished by the manufacturer or a manufacturer-approved vendor. New Luma Pro listings in VITURE’s own store are running about $398.99 to $419, so the coupon-powered discount cuts the entry price by well over $100.
The Luma Pro is VITURE’s midrange model in the Luma series, launched on July 9, 2025. It is built around a 152-inch virtual display with 1200p resolution, 1000 nits of brightness and a 52-degree field of view. VITURE says it is the first XR glasses with customizable RGB lighting and markets it as delivering 50% sharper visuals than the earlier Viture Pro. For a product category where display quality makes or breaks the experience, those are the specs that matter most.

The value proposition is clearest for people who want a private, large-screen setup for gaming, movies or laptop work without paying for a premium new wearable. The Luma Pro keeps the basic shape and feature set of the Viture Pro, while widening the field of view and adding subtle accent lighting and a built-in camera. That camera is still a caveat, because it was not functional at review time and VITURE has tied its use to future software support. Buyers who want every feature working on day one will notice that tradeoff immediately.

Refurbished pricing changes the adoption story, but it does not erase the category’s limits. A lower entry price makes smart glasses easier to sample, especially for shoppers who have already decided they want a USB-C display accessory and are watching every dollar. It also makes the risk feel smaller than paying full price for a brand-new device that remains closer to enthusiast hardware than mass-market gadget. For now, the refurbished Luma Pro looks less like a breakthrough into the mainstream than a more realistic on-ramp for early adopters who care most about screen quality and least about unboxing something untouched.
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