With Apple’s WWDC26 keynote just days away, the latest iPadOS 27 rumors should give iPad owners plenty of reasons to pay close attention. Beyond the new artificial intelligence features for all Apple devices, tablet users can look forward to Monday’s keynote unveiling iPadOS 27 enhancements that should make tablets easier to use in multiple ways.
Here are four reasons for iPad users to be eager for these announcements, whether you use your tablet for writing, creative projects or daily multitasking.
iPadOS 27 rumors give tablet users plenty of reasons for optimism
Last year’s iPadOS 26 stands out as one of the biggest updates to Apple’s tablet platform ever, bringing a more powerful multitasking system that moved the iPad much closer to macOS.
As great as that was, Apple has never made huge changes to its tablet OS two years in a row. Which means iPad users shouldn’t expect more truly fundamental changes in iPadOS 27. Still, rumors indicate there’ll be plenty to get excited about at WWDC26. It just won’t be dramatic changes that are only for tablet users.
1. Going on a bug hunt with iPadOS 27
A major reason for optimism comes from reports that Apple renewed its focus on software quality. According to leaks, the company told developers working on its next-generation operating systems, including iPadOS 27, to put more effort into stability and bug fixes.
The software engineering teams have reportedly been cleaning up years of legacy iPadOS code, working hard to improve performance while clearing out problems. Apple also set extending battery life during heavy workloads as a goal. Developers have had more time to hunt down bugs because the list of upcoming features is relatively short.
After last year’s ambitious revamp of the UI, time devoted to stability should be welcome news for iPad users.
2. Improvements to iPadOS multitasking

Screenshot: Apple
Stage Manager was the first attempt at bringing a more Mac-like multitasking experience to iPad. It debuted in iPadOS 16 in 2022, but Apple significantly refined Stage Manager in iPadOS 17.
According to the latest iPadOS 27 rumors, history is about to repeat itself. iPadOS 26 ushered in a new and better window management system separate from Stage Manager, allowing apps to be resized and arranged more freely, along with a redesigned menu bar and enhanced support for external displays.
While the iPadOS system is excellent, there’s room for refinements. Expect iPadOS 27 to build on that foundation, making it even easier to work with multiple apps, external displays and accessories.
3. Tweaking Liquid Glass
Along with the multitasking revamp, iPadOS 26 included Apple’s new Liquid Glass aesthetic with a translucent and fluid interface. It’s been somewhat controversial, but is not going away.
Rumors suggest iPadOS 27 will refine the look of Liquid Glass, possibly by introducing a dedicated design slider. This could allow users to precisely adjust transparency, contrast and blur across the iPad user interface to suit personal style or accessibility needs.
4. WWDC26: AI everywhere
After years of AI-related promises and little follow-through, WWDC26 should finally see Apple Intelligence go into widespread use.
Rumors indicate Apple is preparing a major upgrade to Siri that should make the digital assistant more competitive with ChatGPT, Claude and other AI chatbots. We expect Siri to become more conversational, more capable of understanding context, and better integrated throughout all of Apple’s operating systems.
For iPad users, that could mean a more natural way to interact with apps, manage tasks and perform complex actions without navigating through menus.
Artificial intelligence is also expected to play a larger role in productivity with iPadOS 27, according to multiple rumors. That supposedly includes writing assistance, grammar checking and more.
And Apple apparently didn’t forget about people who use an iPad to work with images. Leaks suggest Cupertino is working on advanced image-editing features that use generative AI to expand backgrounds, improve compositions and make sophisticated edits with minimal effort. Such capabilities could prove especially appealing on the iPad’s larger touchscreen, where photo editing already proves popular.
In short, AI could transform the iPad into an even stronger productivity device for those who work with words as well as graphics.
WWDC26 takes iPadOS 27 from rumors to reality

Photo: Apple
The WWDC26 keynote is scheduled for June 8 at 10 a.m. Pacific. That’s when Apple will provide the first official look at iPadOS 27 and its other major software updates.
All we have now are iPadOS 27 leaks and rumors, and these don’t always become reality. Apple works hard at keeping its software plans secret. Plus, some anticipated features might not arrive until later updates or even future upgrades.
Still, with bug fixes, multitasking improvements, productivity enhancements and AI advancements all reportedly in development, iPad users have plenty of reasons to tune in when Apple takes the stage at WWDC26 next week.