With WWDC 2024 confirmed for June 10, our first look at iOS 18 is just weeks away. While iOS 17 will remain the iPhone's software of choice until September and the iPhone 16 launch, we don't have long to wait and see exactly how Apple is going to power up the iPhone experience in 2024.
Early rumors indicate that a significant focus of iOS 18 will be on AI, as Apple prepares large language model upgrades to some of its most popular apps. While that will in part be driven by hefty hardware upgrades like the M4 chip, software will play a key role, and iOS 18 should take center stage.
While we've been told not to expect a major design overhaul to iOS 18 (think iOS 7), the release has been tipped iOS update in the company's history. So how will Apple achieve that? Here's everything we know about iOS 18 so far.
iOS 18: Rumored features
iOS 18: AI
Details on what iOS 18 will have to offer indicate the biggest focus will be on AI. Siri has long been an issue for Apple, one that has gotten much worse in recent months as Large Language Models and chatbots like ChatGPT have started to become more popular with ever-increasing capabilities.
However, Apple is thought to be working on a new AI improvement that will take Siri to a new level. Dubbed Ajax GPT, The Infomation previously reported that the new language is a cut above what even ChatGPT can offer.
This could all fit in with a Bloomberg report that hints at big things coming to iOS 18. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman says that the iPhone 16 lineup isn't set to be a huge upgrade over the iPhones currently on sale, with Apple focusing on software this time out. That could make iOS 18 a big upgrade in 2024. More recently, Gurman says we shouldn't expect a focus on a ChatGPT alternative from Apple, but rather a selection of tools to enrich your daily life.
Apple reportedly has six products it plans to improve with AI. Siri is the obvious contender for some kind of large language upgrade. Beyond that, Apple will reportedly introduce more AI to Messages, Xcode, Apple Music, Pages, and Keynote.
In its January earnings call, Tim Cook said Apple is continuing to invest in AI and other technologies, and that Apple was spending “a tremendous amount of time and effort” and was “excited to share the details of our ongoing work in that space later this year.”
Factor in talk of the iPhone 16 lineup potentially getting a microphone upgrade, and it seems that Apple might finally be ready to double down on its AI and digital assistant capabilities to make Siri less of an afterthought than it currently appears to be for so many people.
Apple is also reportedly considering overhauling Spotlight search, using LLMs to answer more complex questions. Another alternative is a rumored partnership between Apple and Google's Gemini AI. It has recently emerged the company may be considering licensing AI from another major company, with Baidu in China also a reported target for that local market. Apple is also reportedly in talks with OpenAI regarding an iOS 18 chatbot.
While there are lots of scattered rumors of iOS 18's AI improvements, one consistent theme in nearly all of the reports is the fact that iOS 18's AI will be on-device, rather than cloud-based. This is likely because of Apple's heavy focus on privacy, as well as a desire to have speedy on-device performance that isn't dependent on internet connectivity, which isn't always reliable.
iOS 18: RCS support
Even as Apple continues to prevent iMessage from working on Android, it's working to make it easier for iPhone owners to communicate with their Android-owning friends and family.
With SMS very much showing its age, people who want to send and receive rich messages and content with those on Android have to resort to using third-party apps like WhatsApp or others. However, that is set to change in 2024.
Apple has already announced that it will bring RCS to the iPhone in 2024, although a firm timeframe for the release has so far gone unconfirmed. That might suggest that this will be an iOS 18 feature, which in turn means that Apple has until September 2024 to get it working.
Once it is working, however, RCS support will bring iMessage-like features to cross-device chats, although it won't fix the green bubble problem, unfortunately.
iOS 18: Accessibility
One report indicates that Apple will also have a heavy accessibility focus in iOS 18. According to reports Apple is planning new Adaptive Voice Shortcuts to let users activate accessibility features like VoiceOver and Zoom with their voice. Another rumored feature is Live Speech categories, which will let users set up actions for certain phrases heard in calls using the Live Speech function.
iOS 18: AirPods hearing aid
According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, iOS 18 will also feature support for a new AirPods hearing aid mode that could build on Apple's conversation boost feature. It's not clear how the feature will work but it could enable Apple's AirPods Pro 2 as a powerful accessibility tool.
iOS 18: Home Screen
In late March Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reported that iOS 18 could offer more iPhone Home Screen customization. A followup report from MacRumors indicates this could include the option to add blank spaces, columns, and rows to your Home Screen, just like Android.
iOS 18: App upgrades
Several popular iPhone apps are expected to get some new features, or indeed a major overhaul with iOS 18:
- Calendar - According to a report in May, iOS 18's Calendar app will bring task support and a much closer integration with Reminders. "Tapping or right-clicking an area within the Day, Week, or Month views in pre-release versions of the new Calendar app will reveal an option that prompts the user to either set a reminder or schedule an event," according to one leak.
- Mail - Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reported in May that Mail is one of four iPhone apps tipped to get a major overhaul in iOS 18. While there are no details, Mail is in desperate need of a new user interface.
- Photos - Like Mail, Photos was listed in a May report as one of those four apps due an overhaul in iOS 18.
- Fitness - Gurman reports that Apple's Fitness app on iPhone is also expected to get a major overhaul in iOS 18, but there are no current reports as to what that could entail.
- Notes - According to Gurman, writing in May, Notes will get an overhaul with iOS 18. It follows a report earlier in April revealing that a new Notes app will include voice recording and math features. According to that story, Notes will feature a new audio recording feature that can embed recordings in individual notes alongside text and images. Another feature, dubbed 'Math Notes' would leverage the Calculator app on iPhone and support proper mathematic notation.
- Safari - Apple is reportedly working on a new Safari browsing assistant feature powered by AI, possibly akin to Microsoft's CoPilot feature. Code spotted in Apple's backend seems to reveal seems to reveal a "Safari browsing assistant" feature. More recently, it was revealed that Apple is working on a new AI-enhanced text summarization feature powered by its Ajax LLM mode, which will be used to identify topics and key phrases on a web page for summarization. Safari is also tipped to feature a new Web Eraser tool that can hide entire chunks of webpages users might not want to see, such as ads or popup videos.
- Maps - According to a report in March, Apple could be planning to add a new custom route option to Apple Maps. The feature would allow users two weak routes themselves, rather than relying on the app to suggest alternatives or detours.
- Freeform - In March, it also emerged that Apple is working on new Freeform Scenes for its Freeform drawing app that will let users easily navigate between sets of slides and images, replete with iCloud support. Freeform is also expected to feature three new keyboard shortcuts for Save, Next Scene, and Previous Scene.
iOS 18: What we'd like to see
It's difficult to know what we would like from iOS 18, but the rumored Siri upgrades are definitely low-hanging fruit for us. Siri is a problem for Apple in so many ways, and not just in the way it struggles to compete with ChatGPT and similar chatbots. Asking Siri simple questions or even telling it to turn off a HomeKit-capable light can be problematic. Improvements are undoubtedly needed there.
Another potential source of improvement could be in iOS 18's photography capabilities. The iPhone already takes some of the best photos around, but there is always room for improvement. We'd like to see Apple offer some of the advanced AI-powered photo editing features that owners of Google's Pixel phones can boast, while improved zoom capabilities might require new hardware rather than a simple software update.
iOS 18: Expected release date
While Apple is yet to confirm when the new iOS 18 update will ship, we can make a calculated guess based on previous schedules.
With WWDC 2024 now confirmed, we can expect the first beta of iOS 18 to drop on June 10. A months-long beta process will then likely follow, with a public release coming in or around September, alongside the new iPhones.
iOS 18: Compatible devices
The current iOS 17 software is available on all of the best iPhones going back years, and that's likely to be the case with iOS 18, too. The 2nd-gen iPhone SE and the iPhone XR/XS or newer are supported currently, but we can likely expect some of the more impressive iOS 18 features to be reserved for its more modern hardware.
That is most likely to be evident with any new AI-powered features Apple adds to iOS 18, with older A-series chips simply unable to provide the horsepower required to make those features work properly.
The oldest supported iPhone chip is the A12 Bionic. If Apple were to drop support for that particular chipset this year, we'd likely see support for the iPhone XS, XS Max, and XR end with iOS 18. Apple's iPhone SE 2 and the iPhone 11 generation all run on the A13, which we'd imagine is safe for another year.
According to an iOS 18 leak in April, Apple is reportedly going to support all of the iPhones that can currently run iOS 17. That would include:
- iPhone 15, iPhone 15 Plus, iPhone 15 Pro, iPhone 15 Pro Max
- iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, iPhone 14 Pro, iPhone 14 Pro Max
- iPhone 13, iPhone 13 mini, iPhone 13 Pro, iPhone 13 Pro Max
- iPhone 12, iPhone 12 mini, iPhone 12 Pro, iPhone 12 Pro Max
- iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro, iPhone 11 Pro Max
- iPhone XS, iPhone XS Max
- iPhone XR
- iPhone SE (2nd generation)
- iPhone SE (3rd generation)
The story so far: iOS 17
Apple released iOS 17 in September 2023 after its own months-long beta program that saw developers and public beta testers put it through its paces. It was also a software update that brought a number of new features.
StandBy was one of the biggest new features, one that turns an iPhone into a status board of sorts whenever it's charging and placed in landscape orientation. That makes it perfect for use with MagSafe chargers and puts information like the time and app-based widgets right in front of you — and it's particularly great on iPhones with an always-on display.
Another big upgrade was interactive widgets, allowing apps to update themselves when tapped. That also means that apps no longer have to launch whenever a widget is tapped — an excellent addition for to-do list apps and others that can now display interactive information on-screen at all times.
Other notable additions include new mental health monitoring and iOS 17.2's new Journal app alongside Messages improvements.