Apple’s iOS 27 is shaping up to be a familiar kind of Apple story: a big yearly software refresh that still leaves a few older iPhones behind. Based on the current leak, four devices are expected to miss the cut – the iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro, iPhone 11 Pro Max, and iPhone SE (2nd generation) – even though they should keep getting iOS 26 security updates for a while.
This kind of cutoff is usually less about Apple being dramatic and more about the slow march of hardware limits. The latest reporting says iOS 27 should work on iPhone 12 models and newer, while the biggest new Siri changes may be reserved for iPhone 15 Pro and newer because they depend on Apple Intelligence. That split matters because it shows Apple is now dividing support in two ways: basic OS compatibility on one side, and the more demanding AI features on the other.
The iPhone 11 family and the second-gen iPhone SE are all aging into that awkward zone where they still feel usable, but not quite future-proof enough for Apple’s newest software ambitions. The timing also lines up with Apple’s usual pattern of trimming support for older hardware ahead of a major feature cycle, especially when the update is expected to lean hard into AI and Siri changes.
What makes iOS 27 interesting is that it does not sound like a flashy, feature-packed overhaul in the old sense. Reports point to a more focused release, with Apple leaning toward stability improvements, polish, and a new Siri experience rather than a giant visual redesign. That is very much in the spirit of Apple making sure the software feels faster and smarter before it feels bigger.
The new Siri angle is the real reason older phones are getting squeezed. A more personal, chatbot-style Siri that can understand context, act across apps, and use Apple Intelligence is much heavier than the old voice assistant model. In plain terms, Apple appears to be drawing a line where older iPhones can still run the operating system, but not necessarily the features that define it.
For owners of the iPhone 11 and the 2020 SE, this would be the moment when a once-solid upgrade path finally ends. That does not instantly make the phones useless, of course, because Apple typically keeps security support alive for older versions for some time. But it does mean those users would be stuck on the previous generation of iOS while newer iPhones get the next wave of features.
That difference can start to matter in subtle ways. Over time, app developers often optimize for the latest versions first, and new Apple Intelligence-powered features could become a bigger part of the iPhone experience than many users expect. So even if a phone still works fine today, losing the newest OS can slowly become a software and ecosystem problem, not just a bragging-rights problem.
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