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Apple’s HomePad might snap onto your wall like a MagSafe puck

New prototype details point to a magnetic mounting system that lets you stick the smart display anywhere.

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Apple‘s rumored smart display could have a genuinely useful hardware trick. A leaker who held an actual prototype says the device, internally called HomePad, might use magnets for mounting on walls.

The details come from Kosutami, a collector of prototypes with a solid track record on unreleased Apple gear. In posts on X, they described seeing a specific version of the HomePad with a MagSafe-like capability. The same prototype also includes doorbell integration and depends heavily on Apple Intelligence. The idea is a smart home hub you can place anywhere, not just prop on a counter.

Plus:It (might) features MagSafe like snap-to-wall feature according to one specific revision of the ongoing prototypes I’ve got seen in person. As what I said, it can rings your door. And highly Apple Intelligence integration featured also. https://t.co/6CzsbL7IgV

— Kosutami (@Kosutami_Ito) March 6, 2026

How the magnetic mount works

This isn’t just a concept. Kosutami says they witnessed it in person on one particular revision of the ongoing prototypes. The mechanism reportedly works like MagSafe, with embedded magnets gripping metal surfaces. You could attach the 7-inch square display to a wall, a fridge, or probably a magnetic stand without any drilling.

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The same prototype showed off doorbell integration too, though the leaker didn’t specify how that appears on screen. The magnetic design solves a real smart home problem. Current displays eat counter space or lock you into one spot. Apple’s approach would let you move the hub wherever needed, then grab it when you want to walk around.

A smarter home hub takes shape

The magnetic mounting signals a bigger strategy. Apple wants this device to live anywhere in your home, not sit unused on a nightstand. Pair it with doorbell alerts and you’ve got a portable intercom you can carry to the front door. The 7-inch screen and front camera also point to FaceTime calls that follow you from room to room.

That flexibility needs capable software. The leaker stresses the prototype is highly dependent on Apple Intelligence, meaning the AI handles tasks like showing calendar events or identifying visitors. It also explains the repeated delays. Apple initially targeted early 2025, then moved to early 2026. A fall launch feels plausible only if the AI features actually work at release.

What to watch for this fall

The HomePad is now expected to arrive in fall 2026, according to Kosutami. That window runs September through December, likely alongside new iPhones and MacBooks. The magnetic mounting appeared in one prototype revision, so it could survive to the final product or get cut before manufacturing.

Apple hasn’t locked in the HomePad name either. The leaker says it’s used internally but the retail branding might shift. What really matters is whether the magnetic trick reaches store shelves. If it does, Apple will offer a genuinely fresh take on the smart display, one that finally moves the hub off the counter and onto the wall.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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