Apple to release 20 new products across rest of 2026 and 2027
At a glance:
- Apple plans roughly 20 new devices spanning iPhone, Watch, Mac, TV and smart‑home categories through 2027
- A foldable iPhone Ultra and a redesigned MacBook Ultra with OLED and touch screen are slated for late 2026/early 2027
- An all‑new smart home hub with a 6‑inch to 7‑inch display and personalized Siri is expected this year
What the roadmap covers
Apple’s product pipeline for the next two years is unusually detailed, thanks to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman and a handful of insider leaks. The list spans every major hardware line – from the iPhone 18 series to a revamped MacBook Ultra – and even introduces categories that have never shipped, such as a dedicated smart‑home hub powered by the new personalized Siri. While the company still promises its traditional September refresh for iPhones and Apple Watches, many of the announced items represent either a generational leap (foldable screens, OLED laptops) or a shift toward on‑device AI, as signaled by the upcoming A20, A20 Pro and M6 chips.
New iPhone family
The iPhone lineup is the most expansive part of the roadmap. Gurman lists the following models:
- iPhone 18 Pro – A20 Pro chip, smaller Dynamic Island, Dark Cherry color, variable aperture on at least one rear camera, Apple’s C2 modem with satellite‑backed 5G web browsing.
- iPhone 18 Pro Max – Mirrors the Pro’s specs; thickness may differ.
- iPhone Ultra – A foldable phone with a 7.7‑inch inner display and a 5.3‑inch outer display, Touch ID power button, two rear cameras, one front camera, and iOS 27 optimized for side‑by‑side app multitasking.
- iPhone Air 2 – Adds an Ultra‑Wide camera, A20 chip and longer battery life.
- iPhone 20 Pro / Pro Max – 20th‑anniversary models featuring a near‑edge‑to‑edge curved glass display that wraps around the sides. These devices push Apple deeper into premium hardware territory, especially the foldable Ultra, which would be the first iPhone with a moving hinge and a dedicated Touch ID button.
Watch evolution and health focus
Apple Watch updates continue the health‑sensor arms race. The expected models are:
- Apple Watch Series 12 – Faster S11 (or newer) chip, possible Touch ID integration, and additional health sensors (still disputed).
- Apple Watch Ultra 4 – Same chip upgrade, Touch ID, and expanded satellite capabilities such as Apple Maps via satellite and photo messaging over satellite for Ultra 3 and newer. The satellite features hint at a broader strategy to make the Watch a truly global device, useful even in remote locations without cellular coverage.
IPad and Mac refreshes
On the tablet side, Apple plans:
- iPad 12 – Transition from A16 to A18 or A19 chips with built‑in Apple Intelligence.
- iPad mini – Moves from A17 Pro to A19 Pro or A20 Pro, adds an OLED screen, vibration‑based speaker system, and water resistance. Mac hardware sees a generational jump:
- Mac Studio – From M4 Max / M3 Ultra to M5 Max and M5 Ultra.
- Mac mini – From M4 / M4 Pro to M5 and M5 Pro.
- iMac – M4 to M5 chip, new color options.
- MacBook Ultra – Late‑2026/early‑2027 redesign with M6 Pro and M6 Max chips, OLED display, touch screen, Dynamic Island, thinner chassis, and macOS 27’s touch‑friendly UI. These upgrades underline Apple’s push for on‑device AI performance across its desktop and mobile platforms.
Home, audio and emerging categories
Apple’s audio and smart‑home portfolio also gets a boost:
- Apple TV – A17 Pro chip, N1 Wi‑Fi 7, and a rumored built‑in FaceTime camera.
- HomePod mini – S9 (or newer) chip, N1 Wi‑Fi 7, second‑gen Ultra‑Wideband, and new color options like red.
- HomePod (full‑size) – Updated to support the personalized Siri.
- Home Hub – A brand‑new smart‑home hub with a 6‑inch to 7‑inch square display, A18 chip for Apple Intelligence, FaceTime, and a wall‑mountable form factor.
- AirPods Ultra – Introduces cameras for Siri AI/Visual Intelligence.
- Apple Glasses – Smart glasses with oval‑shaped cameras and custom frames. The Home Hub, in particular, signals Apple’s intent to create a central AI‑enabled control point for the entire ecosystem, leveraging the same personalized Siri that debuted in beta earlier this year.
Why the roadmap matters
Beyond the headline‑grabbing foldable iPhone, the roadmap reflects Apple’s broader transition toward AI‑first hardware. Chips labeled “A20 Pro”, “M6 Pro” and “M6 Max” are explicitly tied to Apple Intelligence, suggesting more on‑device processing for Siri, vision and language tasks. The integration of Wi‑Fi 7 across TV and audio devices, plus satellite connectivity in watches, points to a push for ubiquitous, high‑speed connectivity without reliance on traditional cellular networks. For investors and developers, the timeline offers a clear view of when new APIs and hardware capabilities will become available – iOS 27 for the foldable iPhone, watchOS 27 later this year, and macOS 27 alongside the MacBook Ultra.
Looking ahead
If Apple sticks to the projected schedule, the next two years will reshape its product hierarchy. Consumers could see the first foldable iPhone on shelves by late 2026, while developers begin building iOS 27 apps that exploit side‑by‑side multitasking. Enterprises may adopt the Home Hub as a secure, AI‑driven control panel for smart‑office environments. And the MacBook Ultra could set a new benchmark for laptop touch interaction, challenging Windows‑based competitors. As always, supply‑chain constraints and regulatory approvals could shift dates, but the breadth of the announced lineup suggests Apple is betting heavily on AI‑centric, connected hardware to sustain growth beyond the iPhone’s traditional cycle.
FAQ
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Prepared by the editorial stack from public data and external sources.
Original article