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iOS 26 superguide: Everything you need to know about the new iPhone update

iOS 26 superguide: Everything you need to know about the new iPhone update

Update: 2025-09-23
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iOS 26: Summary






  • Apple has switched its iOS naming convention to match its primary release year. This means the new version of iOS is iOS 26, despite its September 15, 2025 release date.




  • All iPhones released since 2019 will be able to install iOS 26, including iPhone 11, iPhone SE (2nd gen) and later.




  • Apple is continuing to work on development of iOS 26. The latest beta version is iOS 26.1.




  • With its new ‘Liquid Glass’ interface, iOS 26 will see the biggest design change since iOS 7 in 2013.




  • iOS 26 puts the ‘Phone‘ back in iPhone, with Voice Mail summaries, Call Screening, Hold Assist, and Live Translations.






During its WWDC keynote on June 9, 2025, Apple confirmed that the next version of the iPhone operating system would be iOS 26 and revealed some of the upcoming features. Now iOS 26 is out for everyone with a compatible iPhone to install. Read on to find out what’s new, what is still to come, and everything else you need to know about the latest iPhone update.





There’s lots more than a new naming convention to get excited about in iOS 26: not only does it bring the biggest design change we’ve seen since 2013, when iOS 7 dropped the skeuomorphic design in favor of flat icons, it also puts the phone back in iPhone, with several call enhancements–from Voice Mail Summaries and Hold Assist to Live Translations–that will make it feel almost like you have a personal receptionist at your service.





Digital security is top of mind for most of us these days–or should be. A focus for Apple is on-device spam filtering. iPhone will be able to screen calls before connecting you, while Messages will also filter out all types of scams and spam.





There are dozens of tweaks and improvements throughout iOS. Efforts have been made to clean up and simplify menus, including in the Camera app and brand-new Games app, while Visual Intelligence, Genmoji and Image Playground that were all introduced in iOS 18 have new functionality that makes them simpler to use and smarter than ever. Small but significant, one of our favorite tweaks is quite simply the ability to copy just part of a message rather than the whole thing.





In this article we will cover everything you need to know about iOS 26–how to download it, which iPhones are supported, what major changes have been made, and more. Read on to see what’s in store for iPhone (11 and later) users.





Wondering whether to install iOS 26? Read: iOS 26 vs iOS 18: What’s different, what’s new, and should you update?





At a glance: What is new in iOS 26





Here are just some of the new features you will find in iOS 26, with more detailed further down this article:






  • Liquid Glass graphical user interface: A new translucent effect that mimics glass, with elements reflecting background content, and resizing to fit around onscreen items. Apple says Liquid Glass will blur the lines between hardware and software, and feel more like interactions in the physical world, with elements dynamically reacting to your touch.




  • Updated Phone app: New to this core iPhone app are Apple Intelligence-generated Voice Mail text summaries, Call Screening for spam calls, Hold Assist for connecting you only when you are #1 in the queue, and Live Translations for real-time audible translations in English, French, German, Portuguese, and Spanish (also available for FaceTime with translated live captions, Messages with auto-translated texts, and Apple Music with lyrics converted to your native language).




  • Apple Intelligence updates: Spanning Visual Intelligence, which now supports screenshots, and lets you ask ChatGPT for more information about the information and products shown in the picture, Genmoji, in which you can edit existing emoji, combine emojis and Stickers, and even change emoji expressions, and Image Playground, with support for ChatGPT styles and prompts.




  • Camera app overhaul: As with many iOS apps, the currently cramped Camera interface is getting simplified, with many of the less frequently used shooting modes and options tucked away. Plus, you can now add 3D effects to photos.




  • New Games app: A Home tab puts games Apple thinks you’ll like at your fingertips; a Library tab shows all games you’ve ever downloaded; and a Play Together tab shows you what your friends are playing, compare scores, and even challenge them. iOS 26 brings a standard set of touch controls for buttons, thumbsticks, dpads, throttles, and touchpads, too.




  • Some of the more overlooked new features in iOS 26 that are set to make a big difference include the ability to (finally!) create your own ringtone, an intelligent Adaptive Power mode that makes performance adjustments based on how you actually use your phone, and the ability to use AirPods as a high-definition microphone when shooting video.





What’s still to come in iOS 26?





This year Apple has delivered on pretty much all its promises for iOS 26 made at WWDC, but there are a few more things that could arrive over the next few months.






  • Apple Intelligence enhancements to Siri.




  • An overhaul of the health app, an AI wellness coach and food/nutrition tracking.





What’s coming in iOS 26.1?





Apple is continuing to work on the beta of iOS 26. The first beta of iOS 26.1 was released to beta testers on September 22 and includes the following:






  • More Apple Intelligence languages: Danish, Dutch, Norwegian, Portuguese (Portugal), Swedish, Turkish, Chinese (Traditional), and Vietnamese.




  • More Live Translation languages: Japanese, Korean, Chinese (Traditional), and Chinese (Simplified).




  • Swipe in Apple Music: Swipe left and right on album art in the Now Playing screen to change tracks in Apple Music.




  • Visual changes: Some minor visual polish in the animations and layouts of menus and controls in some apps




  • Background Security Improvements: Apple will be able to deliver urgent security patches without a user having to do anything.





Apple is changing the way Rapid Security Responses work. According to code discovered in the beta by Macworld, the system will be called Background Security Improvements.





The existing Rapid Security Responses system allows Apple to deliver urgent security patches without a user having to download a new version of iOS. That system still meant that users still had to download the update. With the new Background Security Improvements update it seem that users will not need to do anything to install a security update on their device.






Newsflash: It’s iOS 26, not iOS 19!





The new iOS version is iOS 26, not iOS 19 as previously anticipated. In 2025, Apple is breaking with tradition and switching to a simpler naming convention that relates to the year, rather than a sequential number. It has chosen 26 rather than 25 because iOS 26 will not launch until late 2025, and will be the current iPhone operating system until late in 2026. Apple is using this new numbering system for all its 2025 operating system releases, including the next iPadOS update, macOS Tahoe, and <a href="https://www.macworld.com/article/280

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iOS 26 superguide: Everything you need to know about the new iPhone update

iOS 26 superguide: Everything you need to know about the new iPhone update