
Luna, a fast-growing name in the health-tech space, has unveiled its latest product, the Luna Band, at CES 2026. It’s a wearable designed to track your health and actively talk to you about it as well. At a time when the wearable market is crowded with smartwatches that focus on charts, scores, and weekly reports, Luna appears to be taking a different route. The company says the Luna Band is built around a simple idea: guidance over data. The band offers real-time, voice-led health advice throughout the day.
What sets the Luna Band apart is its hands-free, voice-based interaction. With built-in Siri integration, users can log meals, symptoms, or emotional states simply by speaking to it, without opening the Luna app. The band works with earbuds or connected devices, so you can easily have natural conversations with Luna’s AI.
This approach fits into a wider shift in the wearable industry. While brands like Apple, Samsung, and Garmin continue to push better displays and more sensors, this new wave of AI-led coaching could make wearables feel more like personal assistants than fitness trackers.
Under the hood, the Luna Band uses a research-grade optical sensor array and a 6-axis motion sensor to track subtle signals such as recovery patterns, circadian rhythm changes, and emotional stress markers. All this information is processed by Luna’s AI system called LifeOS, which analyses thousands of signals every minute. The system then offers context-aware advice, whether it’s about stress, sleep, recovery, or hormonal patterns, and at moments when it’s most useful.
The Luna Band collects most of your health data, but LifeOS can also pull information from platforms such as Apple Health, Google Fit, Clue, and Kindbody. This helps create a single, long-term view of your health, combining sleep, activity, nutrition, menstrual cycles, and even emotional context.
Luna says the Band will not require any monthly subscription. This could be a major differentiator as popular fitness services like Apple Fitness+ and Garmin offer premium features, including AI, through subscriptions. It wouldn’t be the first of its kind in India, though. The Amazfit Helio Strap launched in India last year, and the display-less Whoop fitness band is also available, albeit unofficially. There is a major distinction, though, with the Luna Band offering AI-powered alerts in real-time, and the Amazfit and Whoop fitness bands designed more for distraction-free workouts.
The Luna Band has been unveiled at CES 2026 and will be on display this week. There’s no word on its India launch, but since it sells the Luna Smart Ring here, we can expect the Band too. However, price will be key. If Luna positions the Band at a premium level similar to Apple Watch or Samsung Galaxy Watch, it may appeal mainly to early adopters. But if it undercuts those players, while offering AI-led guidance and no subscription fees, it could carve out a strong niche, especially among users already experimenting with smart rings and advanced health apps.
For buyers, the Luna Band will make the most sense if you want a health companion, not just a tracker, someone that nudges you in real time.