Ultrahuman Ring Pro moves closer with US regulatory filing
A new FCC registration for the Ultrahuman Ring Pro confirms that this hardware is finished and should soon be ready for the market. This filing marks a shift from the trademark speculation we saw last year to a physical product with finalized wireless specifications.
This matters because back in November the Ultrahuman Ring Pro trademark was spotted in the wild. At the time the story revolved around legal pressure and a forced redesign after the US import ban. The FCC filing closes that gap. This is now a real product with silicon tested and paperwork complete.
What the FCC filing confirms
Recent filings under ID 2A99X-UHRINGPRO01 show that the Ultrahuman Ring Pro carries a December 2025 manufacturing date. Combined with certification testing that took place earlier in November, the timeline points to a rapid turnaround following the legal pressure and import restrictions.
The paperwork shows that Ring Pro supports multiple finishes including Pro Raw Titanium, Pro Matte Gray, Pro Silver, Pro Gold and Pro Aster Black. Like before, sizes range from 5 to 14 – with internal diameters up to 24.91 mm.
The Pro’s outer diameter figures suggest it is not chasing a thinner silhouette this time. So we expect a structurally different ring that stays within roughly the same size envelope users are already used to. The redesign seems focused inward rather than outward.
The ring operates on Bluetooth Low Energy within the standard 2402 to 2483.5 MHz frequency range. It features a tiny 2450 MHz chip antenna built into the frame. The power output is quite low at minus 2.22 dBm. This confirms the ring stays true to the health tracker formula rather than a multifunction smart device.
One interesting detail in the documentation is the mention of the Charger. This charger has its own FCC ID, which usually happens when the charging logic or battery shape changes. If the internal layout remained the same as previous models, they likely would have reused the old charging tech. A new charger supports the idea that Ultrahuman had to completely rethink how the components sit inside the ring to bypass patent issues.
While the filing confirms the wireless radio, we did not spot a mention NFC functionality. This doesn’t mean payments are impossible, but it does mean we shouldn’t take them for granted yet. Sometimes NFC is handled through different certifications or disabled during initial testing.
What to expect next
The FCC filing marks the final regulatory milestone for the American market. The main goal for Ultrahuman here is to provide a reliable, subscription free alternative that stays on the right side of patent law.
While the paperwork is finished, the exact release date remains a mystery. We might see a launch as early as March. The confidentiality clause on the filing runs out in May – so certainly before then.
This timing mirrors the path taken by RingConn, which unveiled its Gen 3 hardware at CES 2026 in January. Even though that device cleared its own FCC hurdles a few weeks ago, retail availability is still not expected for a few more months.
Source: FCC via FCCID Lookup Database
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