Apple Selects Google’s Gemini to Power the Next Siri
Apple is making its boldest move yet to fix Siri. The company has confirmed a multi-year partnership with Google, choosing Google’s Gemini models to power the next generation of Siri. The decision follows months of evaluation and signals Apple’s acknowledgment that Siri needs a serious upgrade.
Gemini will serve as the foundation for Apple Intelligence while Siri continues to run on Apple’s on-device systems and Private Cloud Compute, keeping privacy controls intact. The deal does not replace Apple’s existing use of OpenAI for advanced queries, but it reshapes Siri’s core intelligence. Apple aims to deliver faster, more context-aware responses across iPhone, iPad, and Mac, with the revamped Siri expected to arrive in 2026.
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Why did Apple Choose Google Gemini?
Apple selected Google’s Gemini models as the foundation for its next-generation Apple Foundation Models after evaluating multiple options. Gemini stood out for its performance and ability to scale across Apple’s massive user base.
Apple Foundation Models will continue to run on Apple devices and through Private Cloud Compute, ensuring Siri upgrades follow Apple’s privacy standards and data controls.
Financial terms were not disclosed. However, Bloomberg reported Apple considered paying around one billion dollars per year for access to Google’s technology. Bloomberg also noted Apple chose Google over Anthropic based on both cost and technical capability.
The decision keeps Apple in control while giving Siri the foundation it has been missing.
Siri Gets Smarter for Everyday Users
For everyday users, the Gemini integration means Siri finally gets smarter where it counts. Requests should feel less scripted and more natural, with better understanding of follow-up questions and context.
Simple tasks like setting reminders, sending messages, searching for information, or controlling apps are expected to be faster and more accurate. Siri will rely less on rigid commands and more on how people actually speak.
Apple is also pushing deeper personalization. Siri should better understand habits, preferences, and routines across iPhone, iPad, and Mac, without shipping personal data off Apple’s systems.
The biggest shift is behind the scenes. Siri will be able to answer more questions directly instead of redirecting users to web searches or apps. That means fewer dead ends, fewer “Here’s what I found on the web” moments, and more real answers.
In short, Siri moves from being a voice shortcut to a real assistant. If Apple gets this right, users will notice immediately. If it doesn’t, no amount of branding will save it.
Context and Industry Significance
Google’s position in the industry continues to strengthen. Its parent company, Alphabet, recently surpassed Apple in market capitalization, signaling growing investor confidence in Google’s strategy.
The partnership also lands amid increased legal scrutiny of the long-standing Apple–Google search agreement following a U.S. monopoly ruling. Meanwhile, Apple’s long-promised Siri overhaul was pushed from 2025 to 2026, raising pressure for this upgrade to deliver meaningful results.
Why Does This Matters?
The partnership gives Google’s Gemini access to one of the largest device ecosystems on the planet through Apple. That kind of reach is something Google cannot replicate on its own.
Siri already handles roughly 1.5 billion requests every day across more than two billion active devices. Even small improvements at that scale can reshape how users search, navigate apps, and complete tasks.
Apple’s decision also signals where it sees real competitive strength. If Siri answers more questions directly, fewer users will rely on external websites, shifting traffic patterns across the web.
What Comes Next for Siri?
Apple plans to launch its upgraded Siri later in 2026, though the company has not shared a specific release date. After earlier delays, this rollout carries real pressure to deliver visible improvements.
Apple will continue using Google’s Gemini to power Siri’s core intelligence, while OpenAI supports select, knowledge-heavy queries. This split approach allows Apple to use each system where it performs best.
If the execution holds, Siri becomes faster, more personal, and genuinely useful. If it doesn’t, no partnership will fix its reputation.
