Oura’s detachable ring idea may be bigger than just battery swaps
Oura has another modular smart ring patent out, and this one goes further than the detachable battery idea we covered last month. The newly published filing talks about a functional outer cover that could add sensors, communications hardware, memory, inductive parts or even extra battery capacity to a ring.
The filing was published on May 7, 2026 as US 2026/0123720 A1. It is technically a continuation of an older application from 2022, so this is not Oura suddenly revealing a brand new product direction. But it does show the company is still spending time protecting modular ring concepts.
This looks broader than the earlier battery idea
The earlier patent was easier to explain. It focused on a ring with a removable battery section, which immediately made sense because battery lifespan is one of the weak points of smart rings. Tiny batteries degrade and there is only so much room inside a ring to work with.
This new filing takes the idea further. Instead of just swapping a battery section, Oura describes a removable outer cover that can connect to the ring itself. The diagrams show electrical contacts and inductive components lining up between the ring and the cover, which suggests this is more than just a protective shell.
In simple terms, Oura seems to be imagining a ring that can temporarily gain extra hardware when needed. That could mean more battery life, different sensors or extra functionality without making the main ring permanently bigger.
Why this direction makes sense
Smart rings are always fighting the same battle. People want more sensors, better battery life and more advanced tracking, but they also want the ring to stay thin and comfortable. There is not much physical space to play with.
A modular setup could help with that. You keep the everyday ring small, then add something extra only when you actually need it. Maybe that is overnight tracking, longer battery life during travel or more advanced health monitoring for certain situations.
That part is still speculation, because patents often stay patents forever. But the interesting thing here is not the exact implementation. It is the fact that Oura keeps circling around the same general idea of expandable smart ring hardware.
The drawings also show different attachment methods. Some use electrical contact points. Others appear to rely on inductive components. There are even locking mechanisms and partial outer modules that clip around sections of the ring instead of covering the whole thing.
Probably not a near term product
We would not read this as evidence that Oura Ring 5 is about to launch with snap on accessories. Patent filings are often much broader than what companies actually ship. Sometimes they are defensive. Sometimes they are just future thinking.
Still, it is notable that Oura now has multiple patents pointing toward some kind of modular architecture. There was the detachable battery concept. Now we have removable functional covers that could hold different electronics.
That starts to look less like a one off experiment and more like an area Oura genuinely finds interesting. Whether users would actually want clip on ring modules is another question entirely.
This article originally appeared on Gadgets & Wearables, the first media outlet to report the story.
Source: USPTO
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