For 14 years, the rhythm of the tech world has been set by a single metronome: Apple’s September event. But according to a new report from Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, that era is officially coming to a close.
In a week that has already shaken Cupertino marked by the confirmed retirement of longtime COO Jeff Williams, Apple is reportedly initiating the most significant restructuring of its hardware roadmap since the original iPhone.
The plan? Break the annual release cycle into two distinct windows, introduce a foldable iPhone as early as next year, and prepare a radical “all-glass” flagship for the iPhone’s 20th anniversary in 2027.
As we previously reported in August, the hardware is exciting, but the schedule change is what fundamentally alters how you will buy your next phone.
The Death of ‘September or Bust’
The most consequential shift detailed in the report is operational. Starting in 2026, Apple plans to stagger its iPhone releases to smooth out supply chain peaks and maintain steady revenue throughout the year.
Instead of dropping four new phones every September, the new cycle will likely look like this:
- Fall (September): The “Pro” Launch. Dedicated to the iPhone Pro, Pro Max, and the new high-end Foldable.
- Spring (March/April): The “Mainstream” Launch. Dedicated to the standard iPhone, the budget SE/e series, and the iPhone Air.
This move makes logistical sense. The annual “crunch” puts immense strain on Foxconn and Apple’s engineering teams. Splitting the lineup allows Apple to dedicate specific engineering resources to the high-end models without being distracted by the high-volume entry-level units.
Foldables (2026) vs. The ‘Slab’ (2027)
While the scheduling change is significant, the devices themselves are the headline.
1. The Foldable iPhone (Late 2026): After years of “will-they-won’t-they,” Gurman reports that Apple’s foldable is finally approaching a release window. Expected to launch alongside the iPhone 18 Pro, this device will likely feature a “clamshell” design. The report suggests Apple is leveraging the thermal architecture of the recently released iPhone Air (Sept 2025) to solve the heating issues that plagued early prototypes.
2. The “Glass” Anniversary Model (2027): Looking further ahead, Apple is reportedly working on an “Ultra” tier device for the iPhone’s 20th anniversary. The specs described are ambitious: a fully curved glass body, under-display Face ID, and no visible buttons. This aligns with Jony Ive’s original “single slab of glass” vision, finally realized a decade later.
Leadership Shake-up: Jeff Williams Exits
The roadmap overhaul comes at a pivotal moment. Jeff Williams, Apple’s COO and the operational architect behind the Apple Watch, has officially stepped down as of this week.
Williams was widely seen as the “Tim Cook of operations,” ensuring that millions of iPhones shipped on time every year. His departure—and the redistribution of his role to Sabih Khan and the hardware teams signals that Apple is decentralizing its leadership structure to manage this increasingly complex, dual-cycle roadmap.
The ‘Air’ as a Bridge, Not a Blockbuster
For those wondering about the iPhone Air released just two months ago in September 2025: it was never meant to be a volume seller.
The report clarifies that the Air serves as a “transition product.” Its sales, estimated at 6-8% of the mix, are secondary to its role as a testbed for miniaturized components (logic boards and batteries) that are essential for the upcoming foldable.
Tesla Finally Caves
In a development unrelated to the roadmap but crucial for the ecosystem, sources indicate Tesla is preparing to enable Apple CarPlay in a holiday update.
This reversal comes after years of resistance from Elon Musk. With legacy automakers and newer EV rivals like Rivian offering deep phone integration, Tesla appears to be conceding that for many drivers, the iPhone is the infotainment system.

People Also Ask (FAQs)
Q: When is the Foldable iPhone coming out?
A: According to the latest roadmap leaks from November 2025, Apple targets a Late 2026 release for its first foldable iPhone. It is expected to launch alongside the iPhone 18 Pro series in the Fall window.
Q: Why is Apple changing its September launch schedule?
A: Apple is moving to a “Split Release” cycle (Pro models in Fall, Standard/Air models in Spring) to reduce pressure on its supply chain and engineering teams. This allows for better quality control and spreads revenue spikes across the entire year rather than just Q4.
Q: Is the iPhone Air discontinued?
A: No. The iPhone Air will move to the new Spring Launch Window starting in 2027. The current model (released Sept 2025) was a “transition device” designed to test miniaturized components for future foldables.
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