CUPERTINO, California, April 14, 2026, 11:13 PDT
Apple rolled out the second public beta of iOS 26.5 on Tuesday, less than 24 hours after developers received a fresh test version. That new build introduced an Apple Maps prompt explaining the company’s plan for local ads. Rapid-fire, these beta drops are letting a broader slice of iPhone users see what could be Apple’s next money-maker.
According to the notice, Maps could display local ads tied to “approximate location, current search terms, or view of the map” during searches. Advertising details, however, aren’t connected to the Apple Account—consistent with Apple’s plan to start rolling out Maps ads in the U.S. and Canada this summer. 9to5Mac
It’s a busy stretch for Apple, with two initiatives running simultaneously. The newly announced Apple Business merchant platform, revealed last month, rolls out on Tuesday across over 200 countries and regions. Meanwhile, ad slots on Apple Maps are set to hit the market this summer for businesses in the U.S. and Canada.
Apple rolled out Apple Business with a pitch from Susan Prescott, vice president of Enterprise and Education Marketing, who said it would provide companies with “additional ways to reach new customers.” Over at D.A. Davidson, analyst Gil Luria described Maps ads as “an incremental opportunity” that could benefit Apple’s services business, speaking to Reuters. Apple
Services ranks high among Apple’s growth engines. Back in January, Apple touted an “all-time revenue record” for the segment. Reuters noted that the Maps initiative would push Apple further into competition with Alphabet’s Google and Meta for local ad spend. Apple
Apple faces the challenge of aligning its fresh ad strategy with its privacy message. Over on its Maps ads site, Apple states that its targeting relies on contextual signals—think search terms, the visible map area, and rough location—while steering clear of precise coordinates, age, or gender. Personal data, according to the company, doesn’t leave the device. The wider Maps privacy page adds that Apple leans on random identifiers and “fuzzing” to blur search locations within 24 hours. Apple Ads
Ads aren’t the full story with the iOS 26.5 build. According to 9to5Mac and MacRumors, the public beta is still trialing end-to-end encryption for RCS—so messages stay private, just between sender and receiver—and adds Live Activities support for third-party wearables in the European Union.
Maps remains the standout update. Suggested Places, which debuted in the first beta, brings up recommendations as soon as users tap into the search bar. Sponsored spots will likely pop up there and lead search results, as reported by both 9to5Mac and MacRumors.
The rollout schedule remains uncertain. According to 9to5Mac, there’s no guarantee the new screen makes it into the official iOS 26.5 release with ads enabled. The beta, as noted in the same piece, lacked a clear opt-out option for Maps ads. Reuters has pointed out this could intensify questions over Apple’s ability to juggle its expanding ad ambitions with its public privacy stance.
Apple says Maps ads are coming this summer. But with developer beta 2 dropping April 13, public beta 2 just a day later, and merchant tools launching alongside, it’s clear the company is nearly ready to flip the switch on Maps as an ad platform before summer even kicks in.