Perplexity’s Comet AI browser has finally landed on the iPhone, and it is not just “another” browser icon sitting next to Safari. This is Perplexity’s full-fat AI-first browsing experience coming to your pocket, with voice, hybrid search, and Deep Research all wired directly into the page you’re looking at.
On desktop and Android, Comet has already built a reputation as a cleaner, more focused way to use the web, with millions of people using it daily for fast answers, page summaries, and agent-style help across tabs. Now that same model is coming to iOS, where most people’s “real-world” browsing is fast, local, and often done on the move. The iPhone app is available on the App Store, joining existing apps on Mac, Windows, and Android, so Comet effectively becomes a cross‑platform AI browser rather than a sidekick sitting in a single app.
The first thing that stands out on iOS is how central voice is to the experience. Voice mode is baked into Comet for iPhone, letting you talk to the web instead of typing, and crucially, it understands what is on your screen. You can be reading a long explainer on GLP‑1 weight loss drugs, ask out loud for the key risks and latest trial data, and get a cited, researched answer without copying links or switching apps. The same works for everyday tasks: open a golf course website and have the assistant help you find and book a tee time, or ask about a March Madness matchup while you are already looking at scores and brackets.
Search is where Comet tries to rethink what a mobile browser should feel like. Instead of forcing every query through an AI answer box, Comet for iOS deliberately uses a hybrid model: fast, local, high‑intent searches still show a classic results page, while deeper questions flow into an AI conversation powered by Perplexity’s answer engine. In practice, that means typing “coffee shop near me” gives you the familiar map‑style results you expect, but following up with “which one is quieter on weekdays and why?” becomes an AI‑backed, source‑cited explanation. The aim is to match how people actually search on their phones: quick lookups first, followed by a handful of more thoughtful queries when something really matters.
Perplexity is also dropping its full Deep Research engine into the iOS app, which is the piece that pushes Comet firmly into “AI browser” territory rather than “browser with AI sprinkled on top.” Deep Research lets you run multi‑step investigations from your phone: pull together the state of GLP‑1 therapies, prepare for a job interview with a summarized brief and suggested questions, or compare summer camps with a breakdown of trade‑offs and recommended picks, all with sources attached. Because the assistant can see the page you are on, it becomes natural to highlight a dense article on new tax rules, ask for the main changes in plain language, and then have Comet draft a summary you can fire off by email—without pasting anything anywhere.
Where it gets more ambitious is the way Comet blurs the line between “browser” and “agent.” Perplexity positions Comet as a personal AI assistant that can act, not just answer, and that philosophy is now showing up on iPhone too. From a single prompt, you can ask Comet to open your calendar event, research the attendees on LinkedIn and the wider web, then hand you a quick brief plus three tailored questions to ask in the meeting. For parents, you can have it research summer camps, summarize pros and cons, then help you move through the sign‑up forms instead of juggling 10 tabs and a notes app. It is the same agentic behavior Comet is known for on desktop—navigating pages, clicking links, condensing multiple tabs—on a device where that kind of help might actually matter more because of the smaller screen.
One of the underrated benefits of this launch is continuity. With Comet for iOS, your research threads can follow you from a desktop session at your desk to an iPhone scroll in the back of a cab, without losing context or having to forward yourself links. Start comparing AI image tools on your Mac, then later, on your phone, reopen the same thread and keep asking follow‑up questions while Comet remembers what you already saw. For anyone who lives on multiple devices all day, it is less about installing “yet another browser” and more about having a single, stateful AI assistant that happens to live inside one.
There are caveats. At launch, Comet for iOS is iPhone‑only, with no dedicated iPad version yet, which means tablet users are stuck either with the iPhone app scaled up or with traditional browsers for now. The app also arrives after a slight delay from its originally announced March 11 date, landing mid‑March instead, which hints at how complex it is to ship an AI‑heavy browser inside Apple’s ecosystem. But the broader strategy is clear: Perplexity wants Comet to be the default front‑door to the web across Mac, Windows, Android, and now iPhone, with a growing set of AI agents that can eventually work not just inside tabs, but across your entire computer.
Zoomed out, Comet’s iOS debut is part of a larger race to turn the browser into an execution environment rather than a passive window onto websites. Competing AI browsers and assistants are all chasing similar promises—summaries, contextual understanding, autonomous task execution—but Perplexity’s bet is that tightly integrating these capabilities into a single, coherent browser will feel more natural than bolting them onto existing apps. With voice mode aware of your screen, hybrid search tuned for mobile behavior, and Deep Research only a tap away, the iPhone launch makes Comet less of a tech demo and more of a real option to replace your default browser—especially if you already live inside AI tools all day.
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