Apple is gearing up to preview iOS 27 at WWDC 2026, and the update is shaping up to be a major Siri-focused reset. The big idea is simple: Apple wants Siri to feel less like a voice feature you occasionally try and more like a full-fledged AI chatbot you can rely on every day. To get there, Apple is reportedly leaning heavily on Google’s Gemini technology, while insisting that its privacy protections will remain intact.
According to details shared by Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, Apple’s iOS 27 plans go far beyond a few new Siri tricks. The company is preparing a dedicated Siri chatbot experience designed to handle modern AI tasks such as generating content, summarizing and analyzing information, assisting with coding, searching the web, and working across apps. Siri is also expected to be able to upload and review files, including documents and photos, making it feel closer to a true AI assistant rather than a basic command tool.
One of the biggest changes rumored for iOS 27 is the launch of a dedicated Siri app. Instead of Siri living mostly as a voice overlay, the new app would act as a hub for your conversations, keeping a history of your chats in one place. Users would be able to pin favorite conversations, save older ones, search across past interactions, and start a new chat using a prominent plus button. This shift signals Apple’s intent to make Siri more persistent and more useful for ongoing tasks, not just quick one-off questions.
The expected interface sounds built for flexibility. A conversation view would include an option to switch between typing and voice mode, plus tools for uploading attachments so Siri can analyze what you send. When you begin a new conversation, Siri may even offer suggested prompts tailored to how you’ve used it before. The design is also expected to match iOS visually, adapting to both light and dark modes.
Under the hood, this revamped Siri experience is rumored to run on Google’s cloud infrastructure and TPUs, but in an arrangement Apple would control. Apple reportedly believes this setup won’t weaken its privacy stance, which remains one of its biggest selling points as AI features become more personal and data-aware.
In terms of raw capability, Siri’s next leap may also come from a more advanced model internally referred to as Apple Foundation Models version 11. This version is expected to be significantly more capable than the model powering the earlier Siri overhaul and is said to target competitiveness with the latest Gemini generation.
Apple is also exploring ways to make Siri more deeply embedded throughout iOS 27. A new “Ask Siri” toggle may appear across many of Apple’s own apps, letting users send selected content directly into a fresh Siri chat for help or analysis. There’s also a “Write with Siri” feature being tested that could appear at the top of the keyboard, hinting at AI-assisted writing becoming more native across iPhone workflows.
Siri’s visibility could change, too. While existing activation methods like voice triggers and the power button are expected to remain, Apple is reportedly testing a new Siri interface that lives inside the Dynamic Island. That could make the assistant feel more ever-present without taking over the screen.
Perhaps the most ambitious plan is Apple’s reported attempt to replace Spotlight search with Siri, creating a unified search experience. If that happens, Siri wouldn’t just answer questions—it would become the main way users search across apps, find content, surface upcoming appointments, and even suggest setting changes based on AI-driven context. The interface would still include Siri Suggestions, but with broader reach and smarter intent.
If these plans land as described, iOS 27 could mark Apple’s biggest Siri rethink in years—one designed to make the iPhone’s assistant a true chatbot companion, tightly integrated across the operating system, and capable of the kinds of AI tasks users now expect from modern assistants.




