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AppleComputingiOSiPhoneMac

Apple rolls out iOS 26.5.1 and macOS 26.5.1 with important fixes

Apple has pushed out iOS 26.5.1 and macOS 26.5.1, two small but important updates that tackle charging problems on iPhone 17 models and random shutdowns on M5 Macs.

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Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jun 2, 2026, 8:18 AM EDT
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A graphic representation of Apple’s M5 chip against a black background.
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Apple has pushed out two small but important software updates aimed squarely at its newest hardware: iOS 26.5.1 for the iPhone 17 lineup and macOS 26.5.1 for Macs running the M5 chip. On paper, they look like routine point releases; in practice, they quietly fix the kind of edge-case bugs that can ruin your day at the worst possible moment.

With WWDC just around the corner and betas of iOS 26.6 already in the wild, you might expect Apple’s attention to be fixed firmly on the next big version numbers. Instead, the company is doing something very Apple: obsessing over the details on devices that only just hit shelves. According to Apple’s release notes, iOS 26.5.1 addresses a wired charging issue on the iPhone 17 and iPhone Air, while macOS 26.5.1 fixes a crash bug that could cause certain M5 Macs to unexpectedly shut down on enterprise networks. These are not glamorous problems, but they’re the kind of things you want patched before you hit them, not after.

Let’s start with the iPhone. Apple says a “small number of users” could run into a situation where their iPhone 17 or iPhone Air simply refuses to charge over a cable when the battery is nearly drained. That phrasing is classic Apple damage control: it reassures you this is not widespread, while also hinting that if you’re one of the unlucky ones, it’s a really bad time. Picture your phone at 2 percent on a late-night trip, you plug it into a cable in the car or at the airport, toss it aside assuming all is well… and it dies anyway. You don’t notice until you need your boarding pass or directions. That is exactly the sort of scenario iOS 26.5.1 is meant to scrub out of existence.

What’s interesting here is where the bug appears to live. Apple’s note calls out wired charging “when the battery is nearly drained.” That suggests the issue isn’t with new charging standards or third-party cables, but with the low-power, last-few-percent behavior in the power management stack on Apple’s latest A-series silicon. At the tail end of the battery, the system juggles safety limits, heat, and trickle current. A small logic error there – maybe under specific cable or accessory conditions – could easily lead to the phone thinking it cannot safely start the charge session and simply… not doing it. Most users would never notice, because they rarely let their battery get that low. The ones who do are the ones who absolutely need their phone to work.

On the Mac side, macOS 26.5.1 is narrower in scope but arguably higher stakes for the people it affects. Apple says the update “addresses an issue for enterprise users where Mac computers with an M5 chip could unexpectedly shut down when using certain content-filtering network extensions.” Translate that into normal language and you get this: if you’re on a corporate Mac with security or compliance software watching your network traffic, your shiny new M5 machine might be randomly crashing under load.

Content-filtering network extensions are a core tool in modern enterprise environments. They’re used for everything from blocking malware domains and enforcing acceptable-use policies to routing traffic through zero-trust gateways. Many companies are already all-in on Macs after the success of the M1–M3 era, precisely because those machines proved to be fast, efficient, and boringly stable for frontline staff. An unexpected shutdown bug – tied specifically to the brand-new M5 chips and network security tools – cuts right against that narrative. Even if the underlying cause is a subtle interaction between the new CPU architecture and low-level networking frameworks, it’s the kind of thing Apple wants to squash quickly before CIOs start asking awkward questions.

The timing of both updates is telling. WWDC is a week away, where Apple will preview iOS 27 and macOS 27 while still talking up how mature and refined the iOS 26 and macOS 26 cycle has become. Getting these fixes out now means Apple can stand on stage and talk about a stable platform story, rather than fielding questions about iPhones that won’t charge and Macs that randomly power off under enterprise security loads. It’s also a reminder that the company increasingly runs two tracks at once: big, flashy feature releases on one side, and quiet, surgical bug-fix updates on the other.

If you own an iPhone 17 or iPhone Air, this is one of those “install now, ask questions later” updates. Even if you’ve never seen a charging problem, you really don’t want to discover it the first time you limp into the day with a nearly empty battery. On iPhone, you can grab iOS 26.5.1 by heading to Settings, General, and then Software Update, where the new version should appear and walk you through the install. It’s a quick download and, unlike some major releases, highly unlikely to introduce noticeable changes or new headaches.

For M5 Mac owners, the calculus is even simpler: if your machine ever touches a corporate or school network, you should assume that some kind of content-filtering extension is either already installed or on the roadmap. Updating to macOS 26.5.1 now means you’re less likely to be bitten by an unexplained shutdown later, whether you’re in the office, on VPN at home, or presenting something important in a meeting room. On a Mac, you’ll find the update in System Settings under General, then Software Update, where macOS 26.5.1 will show up once it’s been rolled out to your device.


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