Apple has previewed a new batch of accessibility features coming later this year, with Apple Intelligence being used to improve Voice Control, VoiceOver, Magnifier and generated subtitles across its devices.The announcement came ahead of Global Accessibility Awareness Day, which falls today as we publish this article, on Thursday, May 21, and is the annual moment when technology companies often set out new work on digital access and inclusion.The most interesting change for anyone who relies on hands-free access is an update to Voice Control. Apple says users will be able to describe onscreen controls in more natural language, rather than having to remember exact labels, overlays, or rigid commands.
Examples given by Apple include phrases such as “tap the guide about best restaurants” or “tap the purple folder.” The company also says the feature could help when app controls are not labelled properly for accessibility.
That may sound like a small change, but for disabled people who use voice as their main way of operating an iPhone or iPad, it could make a real difference. Voice Control is already one of Apple’s most important accessibility tools, but it can still be brittle. If the wording does not match what the system expects, the command can fail.A more flexible “say what you see” approach could make voice navigation feel less like issuing machine instructions and more like asking for what you want.Apple says Voice Control powered by Apple Intelligence will be available in English in the UK, US, Canada and Australia later this year. However, Apple’s announcement specifically describes the new natural language navigation as helping people navigate iPhone and iPad by voice, with no clear mention of Mac support for this particular Voice Control update.That absence is important. For many people who rely on Voice Control, the Mac is not a secondary device. It is where longer writing, work, email and publishing happen. If natural language Voice Control launches first on iPhone and iPad only, Mac users may still be left waiting for the AI-assisted voice access that would help most with daily work.VoiceOver, Magnifier and generated subtitles get Apple Intelligence treatmentApple is also using Apple Intelligence to improve visual description tools.VoiceOver’s Image Explorer will provide more detailed descriptions of images, including photos, scanned documents and other visual content. Apple also says users will be able to ask follow-up questions about what appears in the iPhone camera viewfinder.Magnifier will gain similar AI-powered description features, along with spoken controls such as “zoom in” and “turn on flashlight.”










