Apps

Here are all the devices compatible with iOS 18

Comment

Image Credits: Apple

Apple’s WWDC 2024 was packed with announcements about iOS 18, its upcoming version of the iPhone operating system, which introduces a host of new features. Among the highlights are a set of customization options, such as being able to arrange apps and widgets on the Home Screen and customize buttons. Other features include new text effects, the ability to lock and hide apps, new ways to manage your Mail inbox, the introduction of iMessages over satellite, a significant redesign of the Photos app and more.

You can get a test of many of these updates right now through the iOS 18 public beta, which just released, though you should keep all the caveats that come with beta software in mind.

Which devices support iOS 18?

You may be wondering if your iPhone supports the new update. The company says you can download iOS 18 on the following models:

  • iPhone 15
  • iPhone 15 Plus
  • iPhone 15 Pro
  • iPhone 15 Pro Max
  • iPhone 14
  • iPhone 14 Plus
  • iPhone 14 Pro
  • iPhone 14 Pro Max
  • iPhone 13
  • iPhone 13 mini
  • iPhone 13 Pro
  • iPhone 13 Pro Max
  • iPhone 12
  • iPhone 12 mini
  • iPhone 12 Pro
  • iPhone 12 Pro Max
  • iPhone 11
  • iPhone 11 Pro
  • iPhone 11 Pro Max
  • iPhone XS
  • iPhone XS Max
  • iPhone XR
  • iPhone SE (second generation or later)

When will iOS 18 be available to download?

The major release will be available this fall as a free software update. However, if you want to try out iOS 18 a little earlier, the public beta will be available to download next month at beta.apple.com.

It’s also important to note that some features won’t be available in certain countries, languages or devices. For instance, the Safari “Highlights” feature, which automatically detects relevant information, will only be available in English in the U.S. Meanwhile, the new live audio transcription capability in the Notes app can be accessed on iPhone 12 and later in English in Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, South Africa, the U.K. and the U.S.

Which devices support Apple Intelligence?

Apple Intelligence is the company’s new generative AI offering, which will be integrated into most of Apple’s apps. It enables your iPhone to take certain actions, like help compose emails and respond to text messages with Smart Replies.

You’ll get the most out of the Apple Intelligence features with the iPhone 15 Pro or iPhone 15 Pro Max since they have the A17 Pro chip. It’ll also be available on iPad and Mac devices with M1 and later.

Apple Intelligence will be available in beta this fall.

This story was originally published June 11 and was updated to reflect that the iOS 18 public beta is live.

More TechCrunch

Elon Musk has come out in support of California’s SB 1047, a bill that requires makers of very large AI models to create and document safeguards against those models causing…

Elon Musk unexpectedly offers support for California’s AI bill

OpenAI, Adobe and Microsoft have thrown their support behind a California bill requiring tech companies to label AI-generated content, according to letters from the companies viewed by TechCrunch. The bill…

OpenAI, Adobe and Microsoft support California bill requiring watermarks on AI content

Hello and welcome back to TechCrunch Space. NASA leadership have made their decision: Starliner will be coming back to Earth — empty. More on that below. Want to reach out…

TechCrunch Space: The Starliner saga comes to a close — for now

After a nearly three-year interlude, Jared Isaacman is returning to space. The billionaire entrepreneur first went to orbit as part of the Inspiration4 mission, which made history for having a…

Polaris Dawn will push the limits of SpaceX’s human spaceflight program — here’s how to watch it launch live

Apple announced today that Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri will step away from his executive role, effective January 1. Kevan Parekh, Apple’s current VP of Financial Planning, will be promoted…

Apple will replace CFO Luca Maestri next year

Generative AI models aren’t actually humanlike. They have no intelligence or personality — they’re simply statistical systems predicting the likeliest next words in a sentence. But like interns at a…

Anthropic publishes the ‘system prompts’ that make Claude tick

The arrest of Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov in France is starting to impact the app’s traction and ranking. On Saturday, the founder was arrested for allegedly allowing illegal…

Durov arrest boosts Telegram app downloads

The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is requiring Care.com, a platform for gig workers in the eldercare and child care space, to pay $8.5 million in refunds for deceiving caregivers…

Care.com to pay customers $8.5M in FTC settlement for deceiving caregivers, families

Limited partners selling their investment stakes in venture capital funds to other LPs on the secondary market is nothing new. But traditionally these transactions happen offline through an opaque network…

Palico is now the first FINRA-approved company to facilitate online LP-led secondaries deals

Niantic is releasing a new version of its Scaniverse app to let users capture objects around them with more details. Scaniverse 4 will allow users to capture places and objects…

Niantic aims to build a richer 3D map of the world with a new version of Scaniverse app

Apple will unveil its iPhone 16 lineup on September 9, as the company has started sending out press invites on Monday for the upcoming event. The official announcement comes as…

Apple iPhone 16 event set for September 9 with ‘Glowtime’ invite 

Shared e-scooter startup Beam Mobility has placed hundreds of extra “phantom” scooters on city streets in Australia and New Zealand to avoid paying vehicle registration fees to local governments, according…

Beam Mobility secretly deployed ‘phantom’ e-scooters in Australia and NZ to dodge fees and boost profits

While the rapid pace of funding has slowed, many fintechs are continuing to see growth and expand their teams.

These  fintech companies are hiring, despite a rough market in 2024

Featured Article

The biggest trends young NYC investors are bullish about — and why

As twenty-something-year-old investors enter the venture landscape, they spot new trends that could become the next multibillion-dollar tech businesses.

The biggest trends young NYC investors are bullish about — and why

Music streaming service Tidal has launched new features that let artists track royalties and manage their work on the platform.

Tidal launches royalty tracking features for artists

The idea here is to essentially turn OpenStack into a container-based workload that can be managed on OpenShift.

Red Hat’s OpenStack Services are now generally available on its OpenShift platform

Maximize your brand’s presence by hosting your Side Event in San Francisco during Disrupt Week — October 26 through November 1. Connect with more than 10,000 attendees of Disrupt 2024,…

Elevate your brand’s impact: Host a Side Event at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Ben Freeberg was an associate at venture firm Alpha Partners when he suddenly passed out in the middle of the day. He sought medical help, and after running a few…

Cancer survivor launches Oncology Ventures to improve care

Are you a Series A or B startup ready to make waves in the tech industry? The ScaleUp Startups Exhibitor Program at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 can be your launchpad to…

Final week: ScaleUp your startup at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

Inflection will cap free access to its AI chatbot Pi in the coming months, the startup tells TechCrunch. Users can also now export their conversations off the AI chatbot, as…

Five months after Microsoft hired its founders, Inflection adds usage caps to Pi

You might not know Viggle AI, but you’ve likely seen the viral memes it created. The Canadian AI startup is responsible for dozens of videos remixing the rapper Lil Yachty…

Viggle makes controllable AI characters for memes and visualizing ideas

This is a guide on how to check whether someone compromised your online accounts.

How to tell if your online accounts have been hacked

Ride-hailing platform Uber has been fined €290 million — around $324 million at current exchanges rates — by the Netherlands’ privacy watchdog for breaching the European Union’s General Data Protection…

Uber fined $324M over EU drivers’ data transfer breach

A holding company affiliated with an Emirati royal family is injecting a new joint venture between Abu Dhabi-based Marlan Space and startup Loft Orbital with over $100 million to grow…

Loft Orbital forms joint venture with UAE-based firm to scale satellite production in the Middle East

San Francisco’s AI startup boom is so big, even international founders who don’t run AI startups are relocating there to help their companies grow, according to several founders who recently…

In 2024, it really is better to run a startup in San Francisco, according to data and founders who’ve relocated

The first defense startup to receive backing from Y Combinator, Ares Industries, launched earlier this week. In a post on the YC website, the startup outlined a vision to build…

Y Combinator backs its first defense startup, Ares Industries

Pavel Durov, founder and CEO of messaging app Telegram, was arrested on Saturday evening while leaving his private jet at France’s Le Bourget Airport, as initially reported by French television…

Telegram founder Pavel Durov arrested in France

The Port of Seattle, which also operates the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport, said it was hit with a “possible cyberattack” that appeared to affect websites and phone systems. The port first…

The Port of Seattle and Sea-Tac Airport say they’ve been hit by ‘possible cyberattack’

Travly is a new social-first discovery and hotel booking platform designed to cater to the growing number of travelers who rely on short-form video content for trip ideas.  The platform…

Travly lets travelers submit videos for a chance to earn a 5% commission from hotel bookings

As AI developers and others start to think more deeply about how computers and people intersect, Stephan Wolfram says it is becoming a much more of a philosophical exercise

Stephen Wolfram thinks we need philosophers working on big questions around AI