| iPadOS 26 | |
|---|---|
| Version of theiPadOS operating system | |
iPadOS 26 running on a 12.9-inchiPad Pro | |
| Developer | Apple |
| Source model | Closed withopen-source components |
| General availability | September 15, 2025; 5 months ago (2025-09-15) |
| Latest release | 26.3[1] (February 11, 2026; 7 days ago (2026-02-11)) [±] |
| Latest preview | 26.4 beta[2] (23E5207q)[3] (February 16, 2026; 2 days ago (2026-02-16)) [±] |
| Marketing target | iPads |
| Available in | 42 languages |
List of languages Arabic, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chinese Simplified, Chinese Traditional (Hong Kong), Chinese Traditional (Taiwan), Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English (Australia), English (United Kingdom), English (United States), Finnish, French (Canada), French (France), German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Korean, Malay, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese (Brazil), Portuguese (Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Slovenian, Spanish, Lithuanian, (Latin America), Spanish (Spain), Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese | |
| Default user interface | Liquid Glass |
| Preceded by | iPadOS 18 |
| Official website | apple |
| Tagline | Work. Flows. |
| Support status | |
| Supported. Drops support for theiPad (7th generation). | |
| Articles in the series | |
| iOS 26 macOS Tahoe visionOS 26 watchOS 26 tvOS 26 | |
iPadOS 26 is theseventh major release ofApple'siPadOS operating system for theiPad. It was announced onWWDC25 on June 9, 2025, and released on September 15, 2025. The direct successor toiPadOS 18, it was announced alongsideiOS 26,macOS 26,watchOS 26,visionOS 26, andtvOS 26—all of which introduced the "Liquid Glass"design language. The version number—26, for 2026—reflects Apple's shift to amodel-year nomenclature for its operating systems.[4]
iPadOS 26 only runs on iPads with Apple'sNeural Engine. It dropped support for exactly one iPad (7th-generation iPad), becoming the third version to do so and the first sinceiOS 11. It was the first iPadOS version to drop support for an iPad with a 10.2-inch display.
iPadOS 26 introduced a new design language, the first sinceiOS 7, dubbed "Liquid Glass". Many UI elements are more transparent, similar tovisionOS.
A new optional windowing system replaced the Split View and Slide Over introduced iniOS 9,[5] creating a similar experience tomacOS. Apps are freely resizable, with "traffic light" controls akin to macOS that let a user minimize, close, or make an app full-screen. Window tiling options are also available when flicking windows to the edges of the display or using new tiling options. A macOS-style menu bar is also available by swiping down on the top of the display.[6] The new system is powered by a new windowing engine that optimizes window rendering by analyzing which windows are being actively used. This enables the new windowing system on all iPads that support iPadOS 26, while also allowing more windows on the screen at once.[7]
Due to being revamped to use the same internal architecture, the existing Stage Manager is now supported on all iPads running iPadOS 26, rather than only on models with M-series chips and on A-series iPad Pro models with iPadOS 18 support.[8]
The Journal app, previously available only on iOS, now has a dedicated iPadOS and macOS version, with the iPadOS version having support for theApple Pencil stylus.[9]
iPadOS 26 now includes a Preview app, similar to its macOS counterpart, with Apple Pencil support for features such as markup.[10]
iPadOS can now record high-quality video and audio streams separately while using applications like video conferencing, which can be shared or used in podcasting editing applications.[11] The local capture is encoded as anMP4 file, usingHEVC video andFLAC audio.[12]
iPadOS 26 requires anA12 chip or later. It drops support for the7th-generation iPad, which has anA10SoC.[13][14]
The3rd-generation iPad Air is the only supported iPad with a 10.5-inch display, while the5th-generation iPad Mini is the only supported iPad with a 7.9-inch display. Both of these, along with the 8th-gen iPad, are the supported white bezel iPads that run iPadOS 26.
Apple Intelligence requires anApple M1 orApple A17 Pro processor or newer.[15][16]
iPads that support iPadOS 26 are:
| Device | Chipset | Release year | Supported | Apple Intelligence support |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| iPad (8th generation) | A12 | 2020 | ||
| iPad (9th generation) | A13 | 2021 | ||
| iPad (10th generation) | A14 | 2022 | ||
| iPad (A16) | A16 | 2025 | ||
| iPad mini (5th generation) | A12 | 2019 | ||
| iPad mini (6th generation) | A15 | 2021 | ||
| iPad mini (A17 Pro) | A17 Pro | 2024 | ||
| iPad Air (3rd generation) | A12 | 2019 | ||
| iPad Air (4th generation) | A14 | 2020 | ||
| iPad Air (5th generation) | M1 | 2022 | ||
| iPad Air (M2) | M2 | 2024 | ||
| iPad Air (M3) | M3 | 2025 | ||
| iPad Pro (3rd generation) | A12X | 2018 | ||
| iPad Pro (4th generation) | A12Z | 2020 | ||
| iPad Pro (5th generation) | M1 | 2021 | ||
| iPad Pro (6th generation) | M2 | 2022 | ||
| iPad Pro (M4) | M4 | 2024 | ||
| iPad Pro (M5) | M5 | 2025 |
The first developer beta of iPadOS 26 was released on June 9, 2025.
| Version | Build | Release date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unsupported: 26.0 | 23A8330 | Preinstalled on iPad Pro (M5) models | |
| 23A341 | September 15, 2025 | ||
| Unsupported: 26.0.1 | 23A355 | September 29, 2025 | |
| 23A8464 | October 15, 2025 | iPad Pro (M5) models only | |
| 23A8466 | October 21, 2025 | ||
| Unsupported: 26.1 | 23B85 | November 3, 2025 | |
| Unsupported: 26.2 | 23C55 | December 12, 2025 | |
| Unsupported: 26.2.1 | 23C71 | January 26, 2026 | Support for AirTag 2 |
| Latest version:26.3 | 23D127 | February 11, 2026 | |
| Preview version: 26.4 beta 1 | 23D5207q | February 16, 2026 | |
Legend: Unsupported Supported Latest version Preview version Future version | |||
Reception of iPadOS 26 was mixed, with critics praising its all-new Liquid Glass design, desktop-class windowing, Live Translation feature, additions of Preview and Journal, and creative enhancements. However, it was criticized for its new design, causing controversy, a complex learning curve, launch bugs, limited hardware support, and the lack of multi-user support.