iOS 27: Everything We Know — iPhone Fold Support, Siri Chatbot, Liquid Glass Slider & More (2026)
iOS March 18, 2026 12 min read

iOS 27: Everything We Know — iPhone Fold Support, Siri Chatbot, Liquid Glass Slider & More

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iOS 27 — Everything We Know About Apple's Next Major iPhone Update Including iPhone Fold Support, Siri Chatbot, and Liquid Glass Slider

iOS 27 at a Glance

Rave

Codename

Jun 8

Preview

Sep '26

Release

12+

Min iPhone

A17+

Apple AI

Key Features

iPhone Fold Multitasking
Siri Chatbot Mode
Liquid Glass Slider
Core AI Framework
Battery & Performance
Satellite Features

Apple hasn't said a word about iOS 27 publicly. Not a single slide, not a press release, not even a cheeky teaser on social media. And yet, thanks to a steady drip of insider reports — mostly from Bloomberg's Mark Gurman — we already have a surprisingly detailed picture of what's coming to every iPhone this fall.

The short version? iOS 27 is shaping up to be the most strategically important iPhone software update in years. Not because it's packed with flashy new widgets or a radical design overhaul, but because it has to accomplish something Apple has never done before: make iOS work beautifully on a phone that folds in half.

Here's everything we know so far — and why this update matters more than it might seem on the surface.

The "Snow Leopard" Philosophy: Why Less Might Be More

Back in 2009, Apple released Mac OS X Snow Leopard with a marketing pitch that would terrify any product manager today: "zero new features." The entire development cycle was spent cleaning up the codebase, fixing bugs, and squeezing better performance out of existing hardware. Users loved it. To this day, longtime Mac users talk about Snow Leopard with genuine affection.

Codename: "Rave"

iOS 27 is internally codenamed "Rave" at Apple. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman first reported this in February 2026. The priority? Remove bloat, rewrite outdated modules, and make everything faster.

That doesn't mean iOS 27 has zero new features. It absolutely does, and some of them are significant. But the underlying philosophy is clear: after the enormous visual upheaval of Liquid Glass in iOS 26, Apple wants iOS 27 to feel solid, fast, and reliable. The kind of update where you can't point to one big change, but everything just feels... better.

And there's a very practical reason for this focus on stability. Apple is about to launch two entirely new product categories — a foldable iPhone and a touchscreen MacBook Pro — both expected in the second half of 2026. Those devices absolutely cannot ship on top of a shaky software foundation. Getting iOS into peak condition isn't just a nice-to-have; it's a prerequisite for the hardware ambitions ahead.

iPhone Fold: The Feature iOS 27 Is Being Built Around

Let's talk about the elephant in the room — or rather, the phone that folds like a book.

Apple's first foldable iPhone, widely expected to be called the iPhone Fold, is reportedly launching in September alongside iOS 27. The rumored specs paint a picture of a device unlike anything Apple has shipped before.

iPhone Fold — Rumored Specs

5.5"

Outer Display

7.8"

Inner Display

4:3

Aspect Ratio

This matters enormously for iOS 27, because the software has to handle something it's never had to deal with: a single device that switches between two fundamentally different screen sizes, constantly, in real time.

When the iPhone Fold is closed, iOS 27 will look and behave like the iOS we all know. Same layout, same gestures, same single-app experience. But the moment you unfold it, everything changes. Apps will need to seamlessly transition to a wider layout. The system will support split-screen multitasking — a first for any iPhone — allowing two apps to run side by side.

Folded

Standard iPhone layout. Same gestures, same single-app experience you already know.

Unfolded

iPad-like experience. Split-screen multitasking, navigation sidebars, wider app layouts.

To pull this off, Apple isn't just layering a few new APIs on top of existing iOS. According to multiple reports, engineers are rebuilding core iOS components from a deep architectural level. Window management, state persistence across screen transitions, memory allocation for multi-app scenarios — all of it needs to work in ways iOS has never supported before. The iPhone Fold will run iOS, not iPadOS, and it won't support iPad apps. This is a purpose-built experience.

"The foldable iPhone promises to be one of Apple's most exciting products in years."

— Mark Gurman, Bloomberg

Siri Finally Gets the Overhaul We Were Promised

If you've been following the Siri saga, you know the story. Apple announced a dramatically smarter, AI-powered version of Siri at WWDC 2024. It was supposed to ship with iOS 26.4. Then it slipped. And slipped again. As of March 2026, the full Apple Intelligence-powered Siri still hasn't landed.

iOS 27 is where Apple plans to make good on those promises — and then some.

Chatbot Mode

Real back-and-forth conversations like ChatGPT or Gemini

Visual Redesign

Animated avatar inspired by the classic Mac Finder icon

World Knowledge

Direct answers to general queries without web search fallback

Apple has reportedly been developing an internal test app called "Veritas" that serves as a prototype for this chatbot experience. While Veritas itself isn't expected to ship publicly, its existence signals just how seriously Apple is investing in reimagining what Siri can do.

Insider

Apple's internal test app "Veritas" is a standalone text-based AI chatbot — essentially the prototype for the re-architected Siri. No plans to release it publicly, but it shows the depth of Apple's effort.

Liquid Glass: Not Going Anywhere, But You'll Get More Control

When Apple introduced Liquid Glass with iOS 26, the reaction was... let's call it divided. Some users loved the translucent, depth-rich design language. Others found it visually overwhelming, complained about readability, or simply didn't think it suited a phone interface.

According to Gurman, those calls for removal are falling on deaf ears. In his Power On newsletter, Gurman argued that the backlash has been overstated, noting that iOS 26 adoption rates have been strong and that the majority of users appear comfortable with the new look. The design language had full executive buy-in, and the people who championed it are still in prominent roles.

The Liquid Glass Slider

Apple had been developing a systemwide slider that lets users dial the transparency effect up or down. It didn't ship in iOS 26 due to engineering challenges. Now they're trying again for iOS 27.

Less GlassMore Glass

Concept — final design may differ

Core AI: Apple's Developer Framework Gets a Rebrand

Alongside iOS 27, Apple plans to unveil a new "Core AI" framework that replaces the existing Core ML (Machine Learning) framework. Gurman called the naming shift "significant," noting that Apple recognizes "machine learning" as a dated term that doesn't resonate the way "AI" does in 2026.

Before

Core ML

iOS 27

Core AI

Google's Gemini is also expected to power some Apple Intelligence features going forward, marking a notable expansion of third-party model involvement within Apple's ecosystem.

Battery Life, Performance, and the Stuff You'll Actually Feel

This might sound boring on paper, but it could end up being the change iOS 27 is most remembered for. Apple's engineers are focused on meaningful efficiency improvements — the kind that translate into tangible battery gains in daily use.

🔋

Battery Life

Advanced power management for tangible daily gains

Speed

Legacy code removed, core functions rewritten for snappier performance

🛡️

Stability

Bug fixes targeting crash-prone areas and UI glitches

Whether Apple will actively market these improvements or simply let users discover them on their own is still unclear. But if the Snow Leopard comparison holds true, this could be the kind of update where older iPhones actually feel faster after updating — a rarity in recent years.

What Else Might Be Coming

AI Calendar

Full rebuild with Siri proactive suggestions and Apple Intelligence scheduling. Originally planned for 2025, delayed to iOS 27.

Health+

AI-powered health coaching with nutrition planning and medical metric explanations. Scaled back, but parts may still ship.

Satellite

Apple Maps via satellite, photo sharing over satellite, and a Satellite API for third-party developers.

5G Satellite

Satellite-based 5G connectivity, likely limited to iPhone 18 Pro. Depends on Globalstar infrastructure upgrades.

iOS 27 Release Timeline

June 8, 2026

WWDC 2026 Keynote

iOS 27 officially announced. First developer beta available same day.

Mid-July 2026

Public Beta

Open to everyone via Settings → Software Update → Beta Updates.

Mid-September 2026

Public Release

iOS 27.0 ships alongside iPhone 18 lineup and iPhone Fold.

Apple is expected to formally announce the WWDC 2026 dates within the next week or two. Last year, the announcement came on March 25.

Which iPhones Will Support iOS 27?

Supported

iPhone Fold (new) iPhone 18 / 18 Pro / 18 Pro Max iPhone 17 / 17 Air / 17 Pro / 17 Pro Max iPhone 16 / 16e / 16 Pro / 16 Pro Max iPhone 15 / 15 Plus / 15 Pro / 15 Pro Max iPhone 14 / 14 Plus / 14 Pro / 14 Pro Max iPhone 13 / 13 mini / 13 Pro / 13 Pro Max iPhone 12 / 12 mini / 12 Pro / 12 Pro Max iPhone SE (3rd gen)

Not Supported

iPhone 11 / 11 Pro / 11 Pro Max iPhone XS / XS Max / XR iPhone X and older iPhone SE (1st & 2nd gen)

Apple Intelligence

Requires A17 Pro or later. That means iPhone 15 Pro and above for AI features like the new Siri, Writing Tools, and Image Playground.

Frequently Asked Questions

iOS 27 will be previewed at WWDC 2026 on June 8. The first developer beta drops the same day, the public beta follows in mid-July, and the final public release is expected in mid-September 2026 alongside the iPhone 18 and iPhone Fold.
iOS 27 is expected to support iPhone 12 and newer. Apple Intelligence features require an A17 Pro chip or later (iPhone 15 Pro and above). iPhone 11 and older will not receive iOS 27.
iOS 27 is internally codenamed "Rave" at Apple. Bloomberg's Mark Gurman first reported this codename in February 2026.
Yes. iOS 27 is being built with the iPhone Fold as a primary focus. It will support split-screen multitasking, dynamic layout switching between folded and unfolded states, and a 4:3 aspect ratio when opened.
No. According to Bloomberg, Liquid Glass is staying. However, iOS 27 may introduce a systemwide slider that lets users control the intensity of the glass effect — something Apple tried but couldn't finish for iOS 26.

The Bottom Line

iOS 27 isn't trying to wow you with a radical new look or a dozen splashy feature announcements. It's the kind of update that prioritizes doing the hard, boring, essential work — the performance tuning, the stability improvements, the architectural rewrites — that makes everything else Apple wants to do in the next few years possible.

But sandwiched between those under-the-hood improvements are some genuinely exciting additions. A Siri that can actually hold a conversation. An iPhone that folds open into a mini-tablet with real multitasking. A slider that lets you tell Apple exactly how much glass you want in your Liquid Glass. And the promise that your phone might actually last longer on a single charge.

We'll know the full story on June 8. Until then, we'll keep updating this post as new information surfaces.

Last updated: March 18, 2026