Report: Top 5 Vendors in Global AR Education Market

Technavio predicts the worldwide AR in education market will grow at a compound annual growth rate of more than 82 percent by 2021.

AR2

Market research firm Technavio has identified the top five vendors in the global augmented reality (AR) in education market. The companies are EON Reality, DAQRI, GAMOOZ, Magic Leap and QuiverVision, according to a newly published report.

Other prominent vendors in the market are expected to be: Meta, Google, Curiscope, Chromville, Aug That, Popar, Blippar and InGage.

Technavio anticipates healthy growth for the global AR in education market, which it predicts will grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of more than 82 percent by 2021.

Here are some other key market figures, according to Technavio:

  • “The global AR in education market by hardware is growing at a CAGR of 98.66 percent;
  • “The global AR in education market in the K–12 segment was valued at $139.57 million in 2016;
  • “The AR in education market in North America is expected to reach $2,978.39 million [$2.978 billion] by 2021”;
  • The value of the AR in education market in 2016 was $398.78 million;
  • The value of the AR in education market is expected to reach $8.017 billion by 2021;
  • The incremental growth between 2016 and 2021 is anticipated to soar by $7.6 billion.
ARgraph

“One of the growth factors of the global AR in education market is the demand for student-centric and experiential learning in the education sector,” said Jhansi Mary, a lead analyst at Technavio for ed tech research, in a prepared statement. “The increase in the interest in the development of AR applications and content in the education sector is further catering to the growth of the market. Due to the high price of the HMDs [head mounted displays], the technology is available only to high-end consumers and enterprises. However, vendors are slowly transitioning products to cater to the affordable segment of the market.”

In addition, “the discovery of open source AR applications, which allows teachers and lecturers to create their own basic content, is a huge challenge for the AR vendors catering to the education sector,” according to a news release. “This competition is expected to intensify in the forecast period.”

The report also provides information on the VR in education market, which Technavio expects to grow at a CAGR of more than 55 percent by 2021.

The AR in education report offers an analysis of the market by product type (AR hardware and AR content), by end user (K–12 and higher education) and by geography (Asia Pacific, Europe, North America and the rest of the world).

The 70-page report is available for $2,500 for a single user. To purchase a copy, visit this site. To request a free sample, visit this site.

About the Author

Richard Chang is associate editor of THE Journal. He can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • DreamBox Math

    Discovery Education Announces Accessibility Enhancements for DreamBox Math

    Discovery Education has updated DreamBox Math, an online math program for K–8 students to supplement core instruction, to improve accessibility for K–5 students, according to a news release. DreamBox Math provides personalized instruction by adapting to individual learners’ responses and providing an engaging, dynamic learning environment.

  • laptop and fish hook

    Security Researchers Identify Generative AI 'Vishing' Attack

    A new report from researchers at Ontinue's Cyber Defense Center has identified a complex, multi-stage cyber attack that leveraged social engineering, remote access tools, and signed binaries to infiltrate and persist within a target network.

  • interconnected geometric human figures forming a network

    CoSN: School Staffing Is the Top Hurdle to K-12 Innovation

    Hiring and keeping educators and IT staff remains the top challenge for K-12 education in 2025, according to the latest Driving K-12 Innovation Report from the Consortium for School Networking (CoSN).

  • glowing AI text box emerges from a keyboard on a desk, surrounded by floating padlocks, warning icons, and fragmented shields

    1 in 10 AI Prompts Could Expose Sensitive Data

    A recent study from data protection startup Harmonic Security found that nearly one in 10 prompts used by business users when interacting with generative AI tools may inadvertently disclose sensitive data.