AIGLAS
Published 07 July 2026 · AIGLAS Blog · All articles

How Long Can Smart Glasses Record Video in the UK?

Recording duration is the number-one question UK buyers ask about camera glasses—and for good reason. Mainstream pairs often stop after a few minutes, while hands-free workflows such as site walks, cycling commutes, and vlogging need far longer runtimes. This guide explains realistic limits, what drains battery fastest, and where the AIGLAS V1 smart glasses fit with up to 90 minutes of continuous 1080p capture.

Why Recording Time Matters More Than Resolution

Online discussions about smart glasses rarely start with megapixels. Buyers want to know whether a pair can film an entire meeting, a bike ride, or a warehouse inspection without stopping to restart. Short clip limits made sense when storage and heat were tight, but they frustrate anyone documenting real work. If you have ever abandoned a wearable because it cut off mid-task, you are not alone—length beats headline resolution for most practical UK use cases.

Typical Recording Limits on Popular Smart Glasses

Consumer smart glasses vary widely. Some mainstream models cap continuous video at roughly three to five minutes per clip, pushing users towards shorter loops or live streaming instead. Other brands stretch towards ten or forty-five minutes depending on resolution and thermal design. Always check the manufacturer spec sheet: marketing pages often highlight photo quality while burying clip length in a footnote.

What Actually Drains Smart Glasses Battery During Video

Continuous video is the most demanding mode. Higher frame rates, electronic stabilisation, Wi-Fi live preview, and cold outdoor temperatures all shorten runtime. Audio recording alongside video adds modest drain; leaving Bluetooth connected to a phone for notifications adds more. For predictable endurance, start with a full charge, disable unused radios, and avoid restarting clips unnecessarily—each start-up spike consumes extra power.

AIGLAS V1: Up to 90 Minutes Continuous 1080p

According to the official AIGLAS V1 product specifications, the glasses deliver up to 90 minutes of continuous recording at 1080p, with USB-C top-ups providing around 60 minutes from a partial charge cycle. The 8MP camera also captures 4K stills, and the frame weighs just 42g—light enough for all-day wear without the neck fatigue of an action camera mount.

Connectivity includes Bluetooth 5.0 and Wi-Fi Direct for transferring clips to your phone. Certification marks listed on the product page include UKCA, CE, and RoHS, with free UK tracked delivery, a two-year warranty, and 30-day returns under the Consumer Rights Act 2015.

Choosing Recording Time for Your Use Case

Commuting and cycling: Aim for at least 30–45 minutes if you film door-to-door journeys in UK cities.
Trade and site work: Surveys often exceed an hour; prioritise continuous modes over clip chaining.
Retail and hospitality training: Short clips may suffice, but hands-free POV still beats holding a phone.
Travel and family moments: Balance discretion with consent norms—see our privacy guide for public filming.

Tips to Maximise Runtime on Any Camera Glasses

  1. Film at 1080p rather than maximum resolution if the device allows toggles.
  2. Carry a slim USB-C power bank for pocket top-ups between sessions.
  3. Turn off live preview streaming unless essential.
  4. Store clips locally, then transfer over Wi-Fi in batch to avoid radio drain mid-recording.
  5. Keep lenses clean—auto-exposure compensation on smudged glass can increase processing load.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do some smart glasses stop recording after three minutes?

Thermal limits, small batteries, and storage bandwidth often force short clips. Manufacturers may also design around privacy expectations in public spaces. Always read continuous recording specs—not just maximum photo resolution.

How long can AIGLAS V1 record continuously?

Up to 90 minutes of continuous 1080p video on a full charge, according to the product page. USB-C charging supports roughly 60-minute top-ups when you are between tasks.

Is longer recording legal in public in the UK?

Recording in public spaces is generally permitted for personal use, but GDPR applies when you capture identifiable individuals. Use clips responsibly, avoid private areas, and follow ICO guidance on wearable cameras.

Need more than a three-minute clip?

Shop AIGLAS V1 — £124.50