You should be getting iOS 17 / iPadOS 17 today, the 18th of September. It will either download automatically, or you can force a download by going to Settings -> General -> Software Update. More on that and which iPhones will be supported by iOS 17 below:
iOS 17 what is new:
- Choose how you appear when you call people with personal Contact Poster
- Live Voicemail – see a voicemail transcript as its happening
- Better location sharing in iMessage
- Live Stickers for iMessage – pick up objects from your Photos
- New Journal app for memorabilia and mental wellness
- StandBy — iPhone becomes smart clock, Home hub while on charger
- Upgraded Shortcuts app
iOS 17 release date
Operating System | Release Date |
---|---|
iOS 13 | 2019, September 19th |
iOS 14 | 2020, September 16th |
iOS 15 | 2021, September 20th |
iOS 16 | 2022, September 12th |
iOS 17 | 2023, September 18th |
How do I install iOS 17?
When the new software is released, Apple pushes it out to all eligible iPhones. You can either do nothing and let your iPhone download it in inactive hours (and while charging), or you can proactively go to Settings -> General -> Software Update and force the download.
iOS 17 beta
For a while now, Apple has allowed users to test-run its operating systems pre-release. Where do you go for an iOS 17 beta download?

How to remove iOS 17 beta?
It is generally advised to be using the latest public version on your phone — if your device remains registered for the beta program, it will continue to get experimental patches, not the actual stable builds of iOS 17.
Thankfully, it’s extremely easy to opt out of it. Just go into Settings -> General -> Software Update -> Beta Updates, and choose “Off”. A restart may be required and then your iPhone will download the latest public build once it’s out (you can’t roll back to a public build that came earlier than your latest beta patch, so be quick!).
Which iPhones will support iOS 17?
- iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max
- iPhone XR
- iPhone SE 2, iPhone SE 3
- iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro and Pro Max
- iPhone 12 mini, iPhone 12, iPhone 12 Pro, and iPhone 12 Pro Max
- iPhone 13 mini, iPhone 13, iPhone 13 Pro, and iPhone 13 Pro Max
- iPhone 14, iPhone 14 Plus, iPhone 14 Pro, and iPhone 14 Pro Max
Which iPads will support iPadOS 17?
iPadOS is basically a fork of iOS, so all of the info here pertains to the new iPad operating system as well. Here are the iPads that will be able to update to iPadOS 17 when it comes out (and they also support the current iPadOS 17 beta builds):
- iPad Pro 10.5 and iPad Pro 12.9 gen 2 (old design 2017 models)
- iPad Pro 11 and iPad Pro 12.9 (redesigned 2020, 2021, 2022 models)
- iPad Air 3 (old design, 2019)
- iPad Air 4 and iPad Air 5 (redesigned 2020 and 2022)
- iPad mini 5 and iPad mini 6 (old design 2019 and redesigned 2022)
- iPad 6th gen and up (old design from 2018 and up, redesigned 2022 model)
Basically, iPads made in 2018 and up are covered. The exception being the iPad Pros from 2017 — these will also get the iPadOS 17 update, meaning they will be getting their 6th year of iOS support!
iOS 17 new features

New in Phone

- Contact Posters — you can now choose how to appear on the other person’s screen as you call them. Customize a full screen calling card with a photo, emoji, and more. Also supported in 3rd party caller apps
- Live Voicemail — as someone is leaving a voicemail for you, their message gets transcribed to text on your lockscreen in real time. Choose whether you wish to pick up after you see what it’s about
New in FaceTime
- Leave a video message — if recipient isn’t around to pick up, just leave them a quick video message, like it’s a voicemail
- Added reactions and effects — heart reactions, laser beams, fireworks, and other effects can be triggered with gestures. Also supported in 3rd party video apps
New in iMessage

iMessage isn’t getting the huge rework that was rumored, but a bunch of useful quality-of-life improvements:
- Catch-up — tap the arrow to automatically scroll up to the last message you saw in the conversation
- Audio message transcriptions — we don’t all have the luxury of just listening to voice messages in a chat, but some people insist on leaving them constantly. With this feature, view a text transcript of the message
- Swipe to reply — easy way to quote and reply to a specific message in the conversation
- Live Stickers — tap and hold on an object in any photo in Photos and save it to your Live Stickers drawer. Use it to spice up a conversation
- Location sharing — an inline live widget shows your location in real time. Set up auto-notifications for close ones to receive when you get home safely.
New Journal app

They say that journaling has many positive effects — for mental wellness, for growth and self-actualization, and for pleasant memorabilia that you can enjoy whenever. But how does one even begin to journal?
This app aims to be your one-stop-shop and guide to journaling. As you open it up, you will be greeted with suggestions — do you want to save what music you were listening today, the photos you took, or the places you visited? Of course, you can pick all three, and more. Then the journal gives you a few guiding questions to help you put your thoughts to words.
And, if you really want to get into it, you can set a notification to remind you to write in your Journal every evening. It should pop up at around bedtime.
StandBy lockscreen

NameDrop and improved AirDrop

You will now be able to share things across iPhones much more intuitively by simply bringing your phone next to the one you wish to drop to. For example, you can share your contact details in the form of a Contact Poster by simply bringing your iPhone close. That feature, specifically, is called NameDrop.
Improved Autocorrect

Apple has improved the autocorrect algorithms further, working on analyzing whole sentences and your own preferred ways of expressing yourself. Autocorrect will now correct words to what you actually wanted to type, not to what it thought was dictionary-appropriate. Also, it will pick up on phrases and attempt to deliver better word predictions.
Upgrades to Shortcuts
New emoji

Improved Private Browsing mode
New Action Button shortcuts
- Accessibility – toggle pre-modified Accessibility feature (like colors, white point, zoom, contrast, etc.)
- Shortcuts – run a command string that has been pre-made in the Shortcuts app
- Silent Mode – good old Mute!
- Camera – start up the camera
- Flashlight – toggle the LED flash. We wonder if it will automatically go full brightness or just turn on with the last brightness you used.
- Focus – toggle one of your pre-made Focus modes (the new Do Not Disturb in iOS)
- Magnifier – open the Magnifier app
- Translate – launch the Translate app — hopefully with improvements to it
- Voice Memos – start a Voice Memo
More…
It’s worth noting that Apple says that more new features will become available as fall approaches. It’s safe to assume many of them weren’t ready for prime time, or weren’t noteworthy enough to get time in an already lengthy event.
- Photos – better at recognizing people, and will learn pets’ names
- Find My sharing – share an AirTag with up to 5 people
- Offline Maps – download an area and use it for turn-by-turn navigation and estimated arrival times even when offline
- Apple Maps – will now show EV charging stations
- Health app – new features for mental well-being, including anxiety and depression assessments
- Safari – improved private browsing mode with better protection
- Apple Music – collaborative playlists to have with your friends. SharePlay in the car allows passengers to control Apple Music even without a subscription
- Reminders – a new grocery list will automatically group items in categories to make fast shopping easier to organize
- Visual Look Up – you will be able to inspect and “lift” individual subjects from paused videos, just like from photos
- “Hey, Siri” – you can now activate Siri by just calling out the name, then speak multiple prompts without needing to re-activate the assistant
- Assistive Access – changes the phone’s UI to really simplified, clear, big buttons meant to make them usable for users that are impaired in some manner
- Live Speech – allows users to type on the phone and have the device speak out their words — in Phone calls, FaceTime, and in live situations
- Privacy – Communication Safety – a feature that will help keep kids safe when it comes to receiving files, but also sending files with the photo gallery picker. Extends to videos as well
- Privacy – Sensitive Content Warning – on-device image processing will detect photos that are of potentially unwanted content and pop up a warning that you may not want to see it if it’s not from a trusted contact