Meta is extending its Liquid Glass interface redesign to the WhatsApp Mac app, though the project remains in early development and has yet to reach beta testers. The move follows a gradual and somewhat uneven rollout of the updated look on iOS, where initial testing began last October before a wider deployment last month. Even now, many iPhone users report they have not received the changes, which introduce translucent elements across top and bottom navigation bars and integrate with the iOS 26 keyboard style.
For the Mac version, early code shows a refreshed sidebar featuring text labels next to icons, an updated chat input bar, a revised attachment menu, and a more prominent section for locked chats. According to details uncovered by WABetaInfo, the work aims to create greater visual alignment across iPhone, iPad, and Mac platforms. This would bring the iPad and Mac experiences closer to the iPhone design language, creating a more unified feel whether users are on mobile or desktop. Elements like the chat bar, context menus, and buttons would follow the same translucent aesthetic, addressing long-standing complaints about platform fragmentation in WhatsApp’s multi-device ecosystem.
The slow pace of the Liquid Glass implementation raises questions about Meta’s execution priorities. What began as a modest visual refresh has stretched over months, leaving users with inconsistent experiences across updates. While the design seeks to modernize the app with softer, more contemporary elements that echo Apple’s own interface trends, it remains largely cosmetic. Core functionality — messaging reliability, encryption strength, and cross-platform syncing — has not fundamentally changed. In an app used daily by billions for personal and business communication, such interface tweaks can feel secondary when basic performance issues occasionally persist.
This development coincides with similar updates appearing in Threads, where users recently spotted Liquid Glass-style navigation and keyboard integration. It suggests Meta may be accelerating efforts to standardize its visual identity across properties, possibly in preparation for deeper integration with emerging operating system features. Yet the staggered approach risks frustrating users who expect timely consistency from a service that positions itself as essential infrastructure for global messaging. Historically, cross-platform apps have struggled to balance innovation with stability, and WhatsApp’s history shows a preference for cautious rollouts to avoid breaking critical features.
For users invested in the Meta ecosystem, the eventual Mac update could improve the desktop experience, particularly for those who rely on larger screens for extended chats or multitasking. However, it also highlights a broader industry pattern: companies often prioritize visual refreshes to signal progress while core user pain points, such as privacy controls or spam management, receive less attention. The Liquid Glass changes may enhance perceived modernity, but they do little to address deeper questions about data handling and platform dependence.
In the end, this represents incremental refinement rather than a significant leap. WhatsApp continues evolving its apps to match contemporary design expectations, yet the deliberate pace and limited scope serve as reminders that meaningful improvements often arrive more slowly than announcements suggest. Users on Mac and iPad will likely see the benefits later this year, assuming development proceeds without major delays.
