Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. News

Apple TV and HomePod mini with Apple Intelligence could land in 2027

Add as a preferred source on Google
Electronics, Screen, Computer Hardware
Apple

The next chapter of Apple Intelligence could start in your living room.  While rumors continue to swirl around foldable iPhones, smart glasses, and camera-equipped AirPods, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman suggests two of Apple’s most familiar products could be getting Apple Intelligence sooner than expected. 

That means the updated versions of the Apple TV and HomePod mini are currently in advanced testing and could arrive in 2027. If you’re hoping for a dramatic redesign, however, you may want to temper your expectations.

The brains are changing, not the box

Apple isn’t planning major hardware overhauls for either device. Instead, the focus appears to be on bringing Apple Intelligence and the company’s revamped Siri experience to products that live in millions of homes. That approach makes a lot of sense. The current Apple TV is already one of the best streaming boxes on the market, while the HomePod mini remains a solid smart speaker for users deep in Apple’s ecosystem. Neither product is crying out for a visual makeover. What they do need is a smarter assistant.

Apple Intelligence could help with that. Imagine asking Siri to summarize a lengthy podcast, surface a specific scene from a movie you’ve watched, or better understand natural requests in your smart home. Those are the kinds of improvements that could make these devices feel fresh without changing their physical design.

Though, your remote might get a tiny glow-up

The only hardware tweak mentioned in the report is a possible update to the Apple TV remote. That may not sound particularly exciting, but Apple TV users know the remote has undergone several revisions over the years, often becoming a surprisingly big talking point whenever a new model launches.

The bigger story, though, is Apple’s continued effort to spread Apple Intelligence beyond the iPhone, iPad, and Mac. If these devices arrive as expected, Apple’s AI push could soon extend from your pocket and desk to the center of your living room. And unlike some rumored Apple products, this is one upgrade that feels genuinely inevitable.

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
Jackery’s FridgeGuard is the slimmest fridge backup battery you can buy right now
Jackery’s new lineup ranges from a slim fridge battery to whole-home backup solutions.
jackery-fridgeguard-power-backup

If a blackout has ever cost you a fridge full of groceries, Jackery has a fix for that now. The company is introducing FridgeGuard alongside three new HomePower Series batteries, giving you power backup options for different appliances.

FridgeGuard brings a sleek new look to fridge backup power

Read more
Google’s new $99 Home Speaker offers 360-degree audio and next-gen Gemini perks
However, its most advanced AI-based features are locked behind a monthly subscription.
Sphere, Electronics, Speaker

After six years of waiting, Google has finally released a new smart speaker. The $99 Google Home Speaker is available for pre-order starting today and hits shelves on June 25, 2026. At the core of the speaker is Google's conversational AI assistant: Gemini.

With Gemini, you can now hold natural, multi-step conversations with the speaker rather than issuing individual commands. It understands natural phrasing and logic, so you can speak more naturally without phrasing everything like a voice command.

Read more
Your smart home devices could be part of a cybercrime network without you knowing
Backdoors in some smart home devices are fueling cybercrime networks
Hacker with Computer

Smart home devices and gadgets are now commonplace in many modern homes. Security cameras watch front doors, streaming boxes power TVs, and connected appliances constantly exchange data over the internet. Most people worry about companies collecting too much information, but a growing cybersecurity threat suggests consumers may have a much bigger problem to worry about.

Security researchers are warning that some internet-connected devices can contain hidden software backdoors or severe security flaws that allow outsiders to access home networks. In some cases, these devices can effectively turn a household internet connection into a tool for cybercriminals without the owner's knowledge.

Read more