iOS 27 is coming: reports tip foldable iPhone tweaks, Siri redesign and new satellite featuresCUPERTINO, California, January 8, 2026, 02:37 PST

January 8, 2026
iOS 27 is coming: reports tip foldable iPhone tweaks, Siri redesign and new satellite featuresCUPERTINO, California, January 8, 2026, 02:37 PST
  • Apple is expected to ship a run of iOS 26 updates through summer, before unveiling iOS 27 at WWDC in June and releasing it in September.
  • Early reports say iOS 27 may lean on bug fixes and speed gains while adding software work for a first foldable iPhone.
  • Rumours also point to a paid Health+ service and expanded satellite features, including Maps and messaging options.

Apple’s next major iPhone software update, iOS 27, is expected to arrive in September and may put performance and bug fixes ahead of splashy new functions, according to separate reports published on Wednesday.

The timing matters now because Apple is still lining up a big Siri upgrade for the spring and is trying to push further into on-device AI as rivals such as Google and Samsung pack new phones with their own AI features. Apple calls its AI suite “Apple Intelligence.”

The reports sketch a steady cadence of updates, with multiple betas — pre-release test versions — before iOS 27’s expected autumn debut. The schedule also gives developers an early look at changes expected to land alongside new iPhone hardware later in the year.

9to5Mac said iOS 26.3 is already in beta and is expected in late January, adding improved switching and data transfer between iPhone and Android, plus EU-only support for notification forwarding to third-party smartwatches and proximity pairing for third-party accessories. ( Source: 9to5Mac)

The same report pegged iOS 26.4 for late March or early April, with Siri features such as “personal context” to surface details from notes, texts and emails, “onscreen awareness” to act on what is shown, and deeper in-app actions. It noted the capabilities were first promised for iOS 18 and could still face further delays.

After a smaller iOS 26.5 update expected around mid-May and a bug-fix-focused iOS 26.6 in late July, 9to5Mac projected iOS 27 developer betas in early June and a public beta in mid-July, around Apple’s WWDC developer conference. It also said Apple could ship iOS 26.7 alongside iOS 27 for users who do not want to upgrade right away.

MacRumors described iOS 27 as a “Snow Leopard” update — a nod to a Mac release Apple once billed as having “zero new features” — with engineers said to be combing through iOS 26 for bloat and performance issues. It said iOS 27 may also refine the “Liquid Glass” design introduced in iOS 26 and add new layouts for a rumoured iPhone Fold, expected to shift between a roughly 5.4-inch outer screen and a larger inner display. ( Source: MacRumors)

On the AI side, MacRumors said Apple could expand Apple Intelligence across more apps and may add a “World Knowledge” Siri search feature if it misses the iOS 26.4 window, while also planning a new visual look for Siri in iOS 27.

The site also flagged a possible paid Health+ service, with nutrition planning and medical suggestions layered into the Health app, and a slate of new satellite features. Those include Apple Maps via satellite, sending Photos in Messages via satellite, and a satellite framework for third-party apps, though it said some upgrades may require new hardware and work by Apple’s satellite partner Globalstar.

But much of the roadmap remains fluid. Apple has not announced iOS 27 or a foldable iPhone, and both reports warned that key pieces — especially the more capable Siri features — have already slipped once, while satellite upgrades depend on partners and, in some cases, new components.

iPhone Ultra Early Look! Major Leaks & Rumors!

Technology News

  • SWOT captures high-resolution tsunami off Kamchatka, reshaping earthquake risk and forecasting
    January 9, 2026, 8:18 PM EST. An orbiting NASA-CNES mission, SWOT, captured a high-resolution, two-dimensional view of a magnitude-8.8 tsunami off Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula as warnings rippled across the Pacific on July 29, 2025. The dataset, published in The Seismic Record, combines SWOT's satellite altimetry with deep-ocean buoys to reshape how scientists reconstruct earthquake ruptures, assess tsunami hazards, and gauge recurrence of "great" earthquakes along major subduction zones. The 1952 Severo-Kurilsk event set a benchmark in tsunami science; yet the 2025 quake triggered warnings and evacuations across the Pacific, yet produced far less coastal destruction. Researchers say the variation stems from rupture style and ocean dynamics, underscoring the value of SWOT in post-event forecasting and source characterization.