- Apple may rebuild Siri into a chatbot style assistant similar to ChatGPT.
- The new Siri could support both voice and text input.
- The chatbot Siri may be tied to iOS 27 and highlighted at WWDC in June.
- Apple is under pressure from fast moving rivals and growing AI hardware competition.
Apple’s next big Siri upgrade may be more dramatic than anyone expected. According to a new report, the company is preparing to transform Siri from a voice assistant with limited conversational ability into a full AI chatbot that can handle both text and voice prompts in a more fluid, modern way.
If the details hold up, this could be the biggest shift in Siri’s identity since it first launched, and it signals Apple is ready to stop playing defense in the AI race.
The report claims Apple is working on a chatbot style Siri experience that could arrive as part of iOS 27. More importantly, it may become the centerpiece of Apple’s WWDC keynote in June, which is exactly where Apple tends to reveal the kinds of platform level changes that reshape how people use their iPhones day to day.
A chatbot Siri would be a major change in Apple’s philosophy
What makes this particularly interesting is that it runs against Apple’s previously stated approach to AI. Apple executives have been careful about positioning the company’s AI work as something that quietly improves the experience rather than taking over the interface.
In the past, Apple’s senior vice president Craig Federighi publicly pushed back on the idea of Siri becoming a chatbot. His preference was for AI features that feel embedded across the operating system so they appear at the right moment without forcing users into a separate chat style interaction.
But the market has shifted fast. AI chatbots have become the default way many people explore ideas, get quick answers, write messages, summarize notes, and plan tasks.
The popularity of tools like ChatGPT has created a new expectation: assistants should talk like you do, understand context, and keep up over multiple turns. Siri has never been built for that kind of conversational depth, and Apple knows it.
A chatbot version of Siri would be Apple admitting that the old model is not enough anymore.
“Campos” and the pressure Apple cannot ignore
Internally, the Siri chatbot project is reportedly codenamed “Campos.” While Apple has not confirmed the name or the plan publicly, the concept fits neatly into what Apple needs right now: a bold AI story that feels competitive, easy to understand, and immediately useful.
Apple has also been dealing with another issue: perception. The company is widely seen as late to the AI boom, especially compared to rivals who have spent the last year turning generative AI into a headline feature across phones, laptops, and search products.
That gap has shown up in Apple’s own delays. A more personalized Siri has been teased, adjusted, and pushed back multiple times. Apple has also reportedly spent a significant amount of time evaluating potential AI partners, testing technology from major players in the space as it searched for the right fit.
In the end, Apple appears to have landed on Google Gemini as a partner, a move that underlines just how urgent this moment is. Apple is not just building AI in house. It is also making sure it has backup power from a proven model provider while it gets Siri where it needs to be.
OpenAI hardware rumors add even more urgency
There is another factor that could be accelerating Apple’s plans: OpenAI’s rumored move into hardware.
If OpenAI does enter the device market in a serious way, it would not just be another app competing for attention. It could become an entire alternative platform for AI first experiences, especially if it delivers a new kind of assistant designed around conversation from the ground up.
The pressure gets even more intense when you consider who is reportedly involved: former Apple design chief Jony Ive. The idea of an AI hardware product backed by OpenAI and shaped by Ive’s design instincts is exactly the kind of narrative that would make Apple uncomfortable. Not because it guarantees success, but because it threatens Apple where it cares most: devices that feel inevitable.
In that context, rebuilding Siri into a chatbot is not just a feature upgrade. It is a defensive move to protect Apple’s position as the default interface for everyday computing.
What this could mean for iPhone users
If Apple pulls this off, Siri could finally become the assistant people always wanted. Not just a tool for timers and weather updates, but a true conversational layer across the iPhone.
A Siri chatbot that accepts text and voice could make the assistant more practical in public spaces, more useful at work, and easier to rely on when you want fast help without tapping through menus. It could also give Apple a clearer way to show off Apple Intelligence as something that feels personal, responsive, and constantly available.
Still, the biggest question is execution. Apple does not need to simply copy what others have done. It needs to deliver a Siri that feels like Apple: private by design, deeply integrated, and genuinely helpful without being intrusive.
If iOS 27 is where Siri becomes a chatbot, WWDC could mark the moment Apple stops trying to catch up and starts trying to redefine what an AI assistant should be on a phone.
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