If you were hoping Apple’s big Siri reboot would quietly roll out to whatever device you already own, there is some bad news: the new “Siri AI” experience is reserved for a pretty exclusive club of iPhones, iPads, Macs, and wearables.
Apple is tying its upgraded Siri directly to Apple Intelligence, the company’s system-wide AI layer that leans heavily on on-device processing, large language models, and tight integration with your personal data. In practice, that means hardware requirements that go well beyond the usual “runs the latest OS” checkbox. Only devices with Apple’s latest chips and enough memory make the cut, and that list is shorter than many users would like.
Let’s start with the core: the iPhone. If you want Siri AI, you need an Apple Intelligence-capable iPhone, which, as of Apple’s latest announcement, means iPhone 15 Pro or 15 Pro Max and anything in the iPhone 16 and iPhone 17 families, including the iPhone 16e and the new iPhone Air. Standard iPhone 15 and older non-Pro models are out, even though they can run iOS 27. That split between Pro and non-Pro is a big philosophical shift for Apple: the company is essentially saying “AI is a Pro feature” unless you buy into the newest generation. It also underscores how central the A17 Pro and newer chips are to Apple’s AI story.
On the iPad side, the rules are simpler but still strict: you need an A17 Pro-based iPad mini or an M-series iPad Air or iPad Pro, with M1 or newer. In other words, the entire Intel-era and A-series iPad Pro lineup is left behind, even though many of those tablets still feel fast for everyday use. That decision mirrors what we saw with macOS a few years ago: once Apple commits to its own silicon and its neural engine roadmap, anything predating M1 is effectively “legacy,” no matter how much you paid for it at the time.
For the Mac, Apple is drawing a very clear line in the sand: Siri AI only works on Macs with Apple silicon, starting from M1 and up. If you’re clinging to a high-end Intel MacBook Pro or iMac that still flies through your Final Cut timelines, you’ll still get macOS 27, but you will not get the new Siri. That’s a tough pill to swallow for power users who bought into the Intel era at the top of the stack, but it fits Apple’s broader strategy: Apple Intelligence is meant to be deeply fused with the neural engine and unified memory architecture in its own chips, not something retrofitted onto older Intel hardware with less efficient AI acceleration.
The picture gets even more nuanced when you look at the Apple Watch. Siri AI is not truly running on your wrist; instead, select Apple Watch models can tap into the new experience when they are paired with an Apple Intelligence-enabled iPhone nearby. The supported models are Apple Watch Series 10, Series 11, Apple Watch Ultra 2, Ultra 3, and Apple Watch SE (3rd generation). If you have a Series 9 or older SE and pair it with a brand-new iPhone 17 Pro, you still won’t see the full Siri AI behavior on the watch itself. That nuance is already frustrating some users who feel that relatively recent watches were dropped faster than expected.
Then there is Vision Pro, where Apple is positioning Siri AI as part of the broader “spatial computer” story. Both the M2-based Vision Pro and the newer M5-based model support the new Siri, again reinforcing that Apple Intelligence is essentially an M-class club. Some Siri AI capabilities will also surface in CarPlay when an Apple Intelligence-capable iPhone is plugged in, which is an interesting hint at how Apple might gradually distribute its AI features across the ecosystem without rebuilding each platform from scratch.
All of this is launching in a very Apple way: slowly, carefully, and, for now, with a big “beta” label attached. Siri AI is available to test in English in iOS 27, iPadOS 27, macOS 27, and visionOS 27 developer betas, though access is gated by a waitlist. Apple plans to bring it to watchOS 27 in a later beta and to the public betas in July, but even when it rolls out widely later this year, the company is keeping the beta tag on. Given Siri’s history and Apple’s relatively late move into the generative AI arms race, that caution is probably deliberate branding as much as it is a technical reality.
There is also a geopolitical wrinkle: Siri AI will not be available in the EU at launch on iOS 27 and iPadOS 27, with Apple pointing to regulatory issues related to the Digital Markets Act. That effectively splits the Siri experience across regions, at least initially, and adds a new dimension to the already tense relationship between big tech platforms and European regulators. While that doesn’t directly change the hardware compatibility list, it does mean some users with the “right” devices still will not see the new Siri for some time.
The obvious question is: why such a narrow list of supported devices? Apple is not spelling it out in marketing copy, but the requirements point to a combination of performance, memory bandwidth, and privacy-driven on-device processing. Apple Intelligence leans heavily on running models locally where possible, only reaching out to private cloud servers for heavier tasks. That design almost forces Apple to draw a hard line: if a device cannot run the models fast enough and privately enough, it does not get the marquee AI features. You can see echoes of this in the community reaction already, where some users are pointing out that Apple’s “8GB is enough” narrative suddenly looks awkward when the company’s own AI features are locked to devices with more RAM and newer silicon.
At the same time, this selective rollout is textbook Apple. The company has always used new capabilities to gently push the upgrade cycle, from Portrait Mode debuting on dual-camera iPhones to Stage Manager landing on a narrow set of iPads. Siri AI and Apple Intelligence are simply the 2026 version of that playbook, but with a bigger twist: AI is what everyone is talking about, and the perception of being locked out will sting more than missing a camera filter ever did.
If you zoom out, the compatibility list tells you as much about Apple’s roadmap as it does about Siri. On phones, the future is Pro-class chips trickling down generation by generation. On iPad and Mac, Apple silicon is the non-negotiable foundation for on-device intelligence. On Watch and Vision Pro, AI is something that rides on top of that silicon story rather than being a standalone feature. And for older hardware, the message is clear: you will still get software updates and security fixes, but the AI frontier belongs to the newest devices.
From a user perspective, especially in markets like the US, where iPhone upgrade cycles already stretch to three or four years, this creates a new kind of digital divide inside the Apple ecosystem. Two people can be on iOS 27, one with a 15 Pro and one with a 15, and their assistant experience will be fundamentally different. Over time, that gap is likely to widen as more Apple Intelligence features stack on top of Siri AI and stay locked to the same hardware baseline or newer. For Apple, that might be acceptable collateral in exchange for delivering the kind of fast, privacy-centric AI experience it wants to be known for. For everyone else, it turns the simple question “does my device support the latest OS?” into something much more loaded.
Given all that, the practical takeaway is simple but not necessarily satisfying: if you want in on the full Siri AI experience, you are looking at a fairly narrow set of recent iPhones, M-series iPads and Macs, select Apple Watch models paired with those devices, and the latest Vision Pro hardware. Everyone else will be watching from the sidelines as Siri’s long-promised glow-up starts rolling out later this year.
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