SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 29, 2026, 11:14 PST
- Apple has confirmed its acquisition of Israeli audio AI startup Q.ai, with the Financial Times reporting the deal to be close to $2 billion.
- Apple revealed that Q.ai developed tools to capture whispered speech and enhance audio in challenging environments; patent documents also detail detecting subtle facial movements.
- About 100 employees from Q.ai, including CEO Aviad Maizels and the co-founders, are set to join Apple.
Apple announced Thursday that it has bought Q.ai, an Israeli AI startup focused on audio technology. The Financial Times pegged the deal at close to $2 billion, though Apple didn’t reveal the exact terms. Reuters
The purchase comes as investors push Apple to demonstrate clearer AI progress, with the company set to release its results later Thursday. “Apple can probably generate a positive return on very little AI investment, thanks to its distribution,” said Gerrit Smit, manager of the Stonehage Fleming Global Best Ideas Equity fund. Reuters
Apple’s competitors are racing to embed AI into wearable tech, not just mobile apps. Meta and Alphabet are pushing more processing power into earbuds, glasses, and headsets. Techcrunch
Apple hasn’t disclosed how it plans to integrate Q.ai’s technology. The startup focused on new machine learning applications—software that detects patterns in data—to improve devices’ ability to recognize whispered speech and boost audio quality in tough conditions.
Last year, Q.ai filed a patent application detailing the use of “facial skin micromovements” — subtle shifts in the face when someone talks — to pick up words being mouthed or spoken. The document also covered techniques for recognizing individuals and measuring factors like emotions, heart rate, and breathing.
About 100 staff from Q.ai will move over to Apple, the companies confirmed, including CEO Aviad Maizels and co-founders Yonatan Wexler and Avi Barliya. Apple noted that Q.ai was supported by investors such as Matter Venture Partners, Kleiner Perkins, Spark Capital, Exor, and GV, formerly known as Google Ventures.
Apple’s senior vice president of hardware technologies, Johny Srouji, described Q.ai as “a remarkable company that is pioneering new and creative ways to use imaging and machine learning,” in a statement.
Maizels echoed the sentiment on what’s ahead, saying, “Joining Apple opens extraordinary possibilities.” He also told Israel’s Ynet that Apple has long stood as “a symbol” of products people “fall in love with.” Ynetnews
Maizels founded PrimeSense, a 3D sensing company that Apple snapped up in 2013. That tech eventually helped Apple move from fingerprint unlocking to facial recognition on iPhones.
Apple has been steadily integrating AI into AirPods. Back in 2023, it rolled out a feature enabling real-time speech translation between languages. The company also highlighted Q.ai’s efforts to transform how we experience audio and communicate.
That said, the leap from patents to actual products remains uncertain. Apple hasn’t confirmed if Q.ai’s tech will appear in AirPods, Vision Pro, or any other device. Plus, systems that interpret speech or emotions through facial cues often face challenges around accuracy, privacy, and regulation.
Assuming the Financial Times’ number holds up, Q.ai would become Apple’s second-largest acquisition, trailing only Beats, which Apple bought for $3 billion back in 2014. Apple doesn’t usually disclose deal prices and hasn’t indicated when—or even if—Q.ai’s tech will appear in its consumer products. Macrumors