Apple is preparing to unveil the latest version of its iPhone software at WWDC this June, but it won’t be called iOS 19. In a shift that may confuse some and clarify things for others, the company is expected to rebrand the next iteration of iOS as iOS 26, aligning its naming convention with the calendar year — or, more precisely, the year ahead.
According to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, Apple will apply this change across all its major operating systems. That means the next round of software updates will reportedly be called iPadOS 26, macOS 26, watchOS 26, tvOS 26, and visionOS 26. It’s a clean-sweep naming overhaul meant to bring consistency to a lineup that, until now, has featured different version numbers across platforms due to their staggered launch histories.
The rationale, at least according to the report, is that Apple wants a more unified and less ambiguous branding strategy. Developers and users alike often juggle multiple Apple platforms at once, and having a single number across the board might reduce confusion — especially when building or managing cross-platform apps and updates.
Still, jumping from iOS 18 straight to 26 is a curious leap. One explanation is that Apple wants the OS number to reflect the upcoming year in a forward-looking way, much like automakers who release a “2026 model” in 2025. It’s also possible the company simply wants to avoid any numerical overlap with competitors — particularly Samsung, which adopted a similar strategy back in 2020 when it jumped from Galaxy S10 to S20 to match the calendar year.
That said, iOS 26 won’t actually launch in 2026 — it’s expected to roll out this fall with the iPhone 17 lineup. This raises the question of whether Apple might eventually rebrand its flagship phone series as well, perhaps skipping ahead to match the software in name, though there’s no confirmation of that yet.
For most everyday users, the renaming likely won’t change much. What matters more is what the software actually does. With WWDC just weeks away, Apple is expected to focus heavily on AI features baked throughout its ecosystem, potentially including smarter Siri capabilities, generative tools for writing and photo editing, and deeper on-device intelligence across apps. Whether those improvements come under the name iOS 19 or iOS 26 is largely academic — but for developers and marketers, the new naming system could mark a clearer and more predictable structure for years to come.
What remains to be seen is how Apple introduces this at WWDC — and whether future hardware names will eventually fall in line. Until then, iPhone users can expect iOS 26 to be the name on the update prompt this fall.