Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission.Learn more.

Google will reportedly buy Lytro for $40 million

July 24, 2025

Founded in 2006, Lytro is more known for its light field technology than its experimental cameras that featured the technology. Lytro might also be the latest company thatGooglehas its eyes on, with the search giant reportedly looking to buy it for no more than $40 million.

TechCrunch‘ssources appeared unsure about the exact sale value. Even though one source said Google will buy Lytro for $40 million, another said the sale might be as low as $25 million.

Article image

Sources also said Lytro was shopped around toFacebookandApple, though Google appears to be the final bachelor.

Regardless of how much it sells for, Lytro would have a tough pill to swallow. The company reportedlyraised$200 million in funding and was valued at $360 million following its last round of funding in 2017.

Man Wearing Meta Quest 3 On Head

Unlike Google’s dealwith HTC, its deal with Lytro would not include employee migration. A separate source toldTechCrunchthat some Lytro employees were cut loose and received severance pay, while others left on their own accord. Instead, the deal is reportedly an “asset sale,” since Google only wants Lytro’s technology and patents. As such, the search giant would presumably get Lytro’s 59 patents that relate to digital and light field photography. The patents would then be used to further Google’s goals for VR and light fields. The technology would allow for more realistic textures and lighting, motion parallax, and a stronger cue that you are in a 3D space.

Google currently captures light fields with a modifiedJumpVR rig that vertically arcs 16 cameras and puts them on a rotating platform. Google recently released its “Welcome to Light Fields” app for theHTC Vive, Oculus Rift, and Windows Mixed Reality headsets.

Getting Lytro’s patent portfolio would allow Google to better compete with the likes of Facebook,Magic Leap, and others. The deal would also catapult Lytro’s light field technology into the spotlight, though Lytro’s journey was an interesting one.

Lytro originally wanted to make light field cameras that allow for refocusing after taking a picture. The first camera was, funny enough, shaped like a square tube before moving on to the more traditionally-shaped Illum camera in 2014. Their high sticker prices pushed them to niche territory, though both devices eventually saw significant discounts.

2015 saw Lytro pivot toImmerge, its VR rig that can supposedly capture data points from every direction within a given volume.

Impressive technology aside, VR is not yet the money maker that it was predicted to be when Oculus arrived on the scene in 2012. Also, Lytro seems to have considerably stagnated, if the sale figure is any indication. Perhaps a buyout from one of the world’s largest companies might be the only logical course of action.

Thank you for being part of our community. Read ourComment Policybefore posting.