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A few weeks ago, we wrote something that turned out to be incorrect. In our iOS 27 supported devices article, we reported that Apple was planning to cut off the iPhone 11, 11 Pro, 11 Pro Max, and 2nd Gen iPhone SE from iOS 27. That report came from a Weibo leaker called Instant Digital, and it spread to nearly every Apple publication in late April including ours.
Apple went on stage at WWDC on June 8 and told a completely different story.
Not a single device was dropped from iOS 27 support, something that has never happened before in Apple’s history. Every iOS release in recent memory has cut off at least one device generation.
So if you started looking at new phones after reading our earlier piece, We genuinely apologize. Your iPhone 11 is getting iOS 27. Put the upgrade budget aside for now.
That correction needed to come first before anything else in this article. Now let us get into everything Apple actually confirmed at WWDC, because there is a lot here and some of it changes things significantly.
Table of Contents
Who Gets iOS 27 and What Do They Actually Get
Apple confirmed at WWDC 2026 that iOS 27 supports every device currently running iOS 26, including the iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro, and second-generation iPhone SE.
But being “supported” does not mean every iPhone gets the same experience. Think of it like this. If iOS 27 were a cinema, everyone from iPhone 11 upward gets through the door. But only iPhone 15 Pro and newer users get the premium seats with the full Apple Intelligence experience.
The compatibility splits into three tiers: full iOS 27 with Apple Intelligence on iPhone 15 Pro and newer, full iOS 27 without Apple Intelligence on iPhone 11 through iPhone 15 non-Pro plus iPhone SE 2nd and 3rd generation, and no support at all on iPhone XS, XR, and older models.
For iPhone 11 through iPhone 15 standard users, the update still brings real improvements. Apple has reworked its CPU scheduler in a way that should deliver tangible speed improvements on older hardware, meaning devices as far back as the iPhone 11 stand to benefit. You just won’t get the writing tools, image generation, and advanced Siri features that require the newer chips.
That is not Apple being cruel. That is just how hardware generations work. The honest question to ask is whether the non-AI improvements are worth installing iOS 27 on an older phone, and based on what Apple confirmed, the answer is yes.
Siri AI: What It Actually Does Now
We called this one correctly back in our iOS 27 leaks piece. Apple has rebuilt Siri into something closer to a real chatbot. But seeing it confirmed officially makes the scope of the change clearer than any pre-WWDC leak managed to capture. Craig Federighi said on stage:
“We see Siri not as a separate chatbot, but rather as an integral but conversational tool that you use in the moment, deeply integrated into your experience.”
That one sentence actually matters. Apple is not trying to copy ChatGPT. The goal is for Siri to feel like part of the operating system rather than an app you open separately. Whether they pull that off is something we will find out when the stable version lands in September, but the direction is clear.
I have been using the standard Siri on iOS 26 while most of my friends on Android switched to Gemini as their main assistant over a year ago. The difference in what those two assistants can actually do has been uncomfortable to watch. Ask old Siri to find a flight confirmation in your email and add it to a calendar event and it falls apart halfway through. That specific cross-app kind of task is exactly what the new Siri is supposed to handle.
Here is what Apple confirmed it can do:
Siri can now describe what it sees on screen, locate photos based on user descriptions, search the web for information, draft documents, and perform tasks across multiple apps.
It also gets its own dedicated app with full conversation history. You can start a question on your iPhone and continue it on your iPad. It works the way ChatGPT and Claude work, where past conversations are saved and searchable rather than disappearing the moment you close the interface.
Siri mode inside the Camera is the feature I am personally most excited about. You point your camera at something and Siri surfaces information about it immediately. Apple demonstrated this with a nutrition label that automatically logged to the Health app. I am thinking about what this means while traveling. Point at a restaurant menu in another language, a street sign, a landmark, and get context without switching between four different apps.
Siri can also generate a draft from scratch or provide feedback on something you have written, and in Messages and Mail it can match your writing style, punctuation, and tone so the output sounds like you rather than a generic assistant.
As we covered in our article on Google Gemini powering Apple’s new Siri, the engine running all of this is Gemini under the hood. Federighi was notably careful to emphasize privacy on stage, saying “privacy in AI is non-negotiable” and that data is only used to execute your request.
One caveat for our readers in Europe: Siri AI will not be available on iOS 27 or iPadOS 27 in the EU at launch, with Apple pointing to the Digital Markets Act as the reason. That is a real gap and one Apple has not given a clear timeline for fixing.
The Performance Numbers Nobody Is Talking About Enough
Every review of iOS 27 leads with Siri. That makes sense because Siri is the headline. But for the hundreds of millions of people using iPhones that will not get Apple Intelligence, the performance improvements are the actual story of this update.
Apps will launch up to 30% faster, new photos will save up to 70% faster, and AirDrop transfers will be up to 80% faster.
I know how Apple marketing numbers work. “Up to” means best case on Apple’s own test hardware under ideal conditions. Real daily use will land lower than that. But even getting half of those gains would be genuinely noticeable. The AirDrop improvement alone, if it holds anywhere near that figure, fixes one of the most reliably frustrating parts of sharing files between Apple devices.
The CPU scheduler change is the part that interests me most. Apple structured its entire WWDC keynote to lead with fixes before features, framing performance as the foundation everything else is built on. That is a different kind of confidence than Apple usually shows at these events. It says they know people have been frustrated with iOS feeling rough around the edges and they addressed it before showing off new things. That ordering matters.
Liquid Glass Gets a User Control
When iOS 26 introduced the Liquid Glass design, opinions split hard. Some people loved how it looked. Others found text hard to read over the blurry, translucent backgrounds, especially outdoors in bright light.
Apple’s answer in iOS 27 is simple and right. A new Liquid Glass intensity slider lets users dial the design back or amplify it directly from Settings.
This is not Apple admitting the design was a mistake. It is Apple recognizing that a single default cannot satisfy everyone and that giving users a dial is better than picking for them. App icons are also sharper and more detailed this cycle, which was one of the specific complaints about how the Liquid Glass aesthetic affected readability.
If you loved iOS 26 visually, nothing changes for you. If you found it hard to read, you now have a way to pull it back.
Photo Editing Took a Real Step Forward
Three tools here are worth understanding separately because they do different things.
Spatial Reframing lets you reposition a shot after it is already taken. This is not a crop. It reconstructs what the image would look like from a slightly different angle using the data the camera captured. It works best on photos where your framing was close but not quite right.
The Extend tool pushes the edges of a photo outward, filling in what would have been outside the original frame by matching the surrounding environment. This is the same concept as generative fill in desktop photo editing software, now built into the native Photos app.
Clean Up, which has been in iOS for a year, has been upgraded to handle larger objects. The earlier version worked well for small background distractions. The new version targets bigger removals that previously required a third-party app.
Together these three tools close a real gap. There are things you used to have to export a photo to Lightroom Mobile or Snapseed to fix. Now you can handle them in Photos without leaving the app.
Child Safety: The Feature That Deserved More Stage Time
This part of the iOS 27 announcement got less coverage than Siri but it is arguably the most substantial rethinking of a core iOS feature in years.
The old Screen Time and parental controls setup was genuinely difficult to navigate. Settings were scattered across multiple menus, easy to misconfigure, and hard to check at a glance. Most parents we have spoken to either gave up on configuring it properly or relied on a single blunt restriction like total time limits.
iOS 27 changes the structure. During initial device setup, parents can now choose exactly which apps a child has access to from the start rather than restricting things after the fact. A new Ask to Browse feature requires children to request permission before visiting any new website, and the parent sees a preview of that actual website in Messages before approving it. That preview detail matters because it means parents can see what their child is actually trying to access, not just a URL.
Communication Safety, which previously detected nudity in shared images, now also catches gore and violence in FaceTime calls and shared videos. Time Allowances across categories like games, social media, and entertainment come with age-based guidance that Apple says was developed with child development experts, not just a generic timer.
The overall redesign of parental controls in Settings makes the whole system readable at a glance. For any parent who has tried to find the right toggle in the old Screen Time menus, that is not a small improvement.
Other Confirmed Features Worth Knowing
Mail Search now works properly. A new relevance ranking system brings the most useful results to the top of your inbox search. Anyone who has tried to find an old email on iPhone knows this was overdue.
AirPods Custom EQ lets you adjust lows, mids, and highs yourself for the first time rather than relying entirely on Apple’s adaptive presets. This is something Android headphone apps have offered for years.
GymKit comes to iPhone, letting you connect directly to compatible cardio equipment at the gym for real-time metrics. This previously required an Apple Watch.
Flyover in Maps uses Visual Intelligence to render individual trees and architectural details in 3D city views. It is a genuinely useful upgrade for anyone who uses Maps to preview a destination before traveling.
The Health app gets perimenopause and menopause support in Cycle Tracking, with notifications when your logged patterns suggest hormonal transition. This has been a gap in mainstream health tracking apps for a long time.
When You Can Get It
iOS 27 is available as a developer beta immediately following the keynote, with a public beta coming later this summer and the general release in the fall. September 2026 is the expected launch window, alongside the iPhone 18 lineup.
If you want to try it before then, the developer beta is open and does not require a paid Apple developer account this cycle. Just know that beta software carries risk on a primary device. If you can wait, September is not far off and the stable release will have had months of real-world testing behind it.
What We Think After WWDC
We have been covering iOS 27 since the first leaks appeared in April. The update that Apple officially announced landed differently than the leak cycle suggested it would.
We expected device cuts. There were none. We expected the Siri improvements to be vague and demo-ware. What Apple showed was specific enough that developers can build against it right now. We used the Snow Leopard comparison in our original iOS 27 leaks article and that framing held up. This is a release that fixes things rather than reinvents them, and for most iPhone users that is what was actually needed.
The lesson we are taking from the iPhone 11 compatibility story is a simple one. Device compatibility leaks, no matter how detailed they look or how trusted the source appears, should be treated as unverified until Apple speaks. We did not apply that standard strictly enough in April. We will apply it better next time.

