Luna today announced a major upgrade to the Luna Ring, transforming it into the world’s first wearable you can truly talk to. With this launch, Luna transforms the Luna Ring into a conversational health system, allowing people to interact with their health through natural voice, grounded in live biometric data from the Luna Ring.
For years, wearables have collected more and more data, but interacting with that data has remained fragmented and effort heavy. logging meals, supplements, workouts, caffeine, or even how you feel still requires opening apps, tapping through screens, and switching between systems. Insight often comes late, if at all.
This upgrade to the Luna Ring changes that.
With simple voice commands users can instantly log meals, supplements, caffeine, workouts, or subjective feelings without opening an app or touching their phone. Users can also have real, contextual conversations about their sleep, recovery, stress, hormones, or performance, all grounded in their actual biometric data and daily life context.
In that moment, wearables stop being something you check, and health stops being fragmented across apps. Instead, health becomes something you can talk to, and something that can finally listen, reason, and respond.
“This marks a fundamental shift in what a wearable is,” said Amit Khatri, Founder at Luna. “The Luna Ring no longer just measures the body. It understands context, connects daily behavior with biometrics, and communicates back in a way that fits naturally into real life.”
The upgrade reflects Luna’s broader vision to move beyond dashboards and metrics toward ambient, conversational health intelligence, where insight and guidance are available in real time without friction.
Voice commands are supported with the Luna Ring gen 1 and 2, and only through Siri (no Android support yet). The Luna Ring gen 2 is available for £299/€329 at the official website in the following five colors:
- Stardust Silver
- Lunar Black
- Rose Gold
- Midnight Black
- Sunlit Gold
Unfortunately, the Luna Ring is not available in the U.S. due to the ongoing Oura suit against several smart ring manufacturers that saw the likes of Ringconn, and Ultrahuman getting banned from doing business in the country.
Source: Email press release.