Apple appears to be quietly discontinuing the Vision Pro travel case in international markets, with the $199 accessory removed from storefronts in much of the world.
Woozad can confirm that the Apple Vision Pro Travel Case is no longer listed on Apple’s online storefronts worldwide, including the UK, Japan, Germany, France, Ireland and Hong Kong. The Apple Vision Pro accessories page in these countries no longer lists the travel case at all, and the product web pages that once contained it have been completely removed, which would indicate a shutdown with no plans to relaunch the product, at least in these countries.
In China and Australia, the ads remain active and viewable, but the product is grayed out and unavailable for purchase. The case continues to be sold as usual in the United States, Canada and the United Arab Emirates. It’s unclear exactly when the changes were made, but they appear to have happened recently.
The Belkin Travel Bag for Apple Vision Pro remains available as an alternative for customers in international markets. Apple has not announced any changes to the availability of the original product.
The move comes as Apple appears to have scaled back its Vision Pro ambitions. The headset’s M5 update in October 2025 reportedly failed to reignite significant consumer interest, with the $3,499 price remaining unchanged despite the chip upgrade. Apple has reportedly sold around 600,000 Vision Pro units in total, and sources have noted an unusually high return rate compared to any other recent Apple product.
Following the poor reception of the M5 model, the Vision Pro team was reportedly disbanded and its members redistributed among other projects. Vision Products Group chief Mike Rockwell has led Apple’s Siri team since March 2025. Plans to create a cheaper, lighter “Vision Air” were reportedly scrapped in October 2025, and BloombergMark Gurman of , said that if a new headset were to eventually materialize, he wouldn’t expect it for “at least two more years”, given that the bulk of Apple’s mixed reality hardware talent has been moved to other projects.
Supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reported this month that new Apple CEO John Ternus had approved the cancellation of a second Vision Pro and the Vision Air, with the focus now shifting to smart glasses. Kuo says two products remain in development: AI-equipped glasses to rival Meta’s Ray-Bans, expected in 2027, and a set of screen-equipped AR glasses that likely won’t arrive until 2029. Gurman separately noted that a thinner, cheaper Vision Pro remains a long-term possibility, but is unlikely to arrive before late 2028 or 2029 at the earliest.
Whether it’s a complete shutdown or just a quiet inventory reduction, it’s hard not to see the apparent phaseout of the Vision Pro Travel Case as part of the device’s uncertain future.
Thanks Ben!
