Every year, Apple hosts the Worldwide Developers Conference to reveal the latest updates to its operating systems (and occasionally drops some hardware surprises, too). And all signs point to a more interesting WWDC than usual.

For starters, WWDC 2026 will be Tim Cook's last big event as CEO, and we're eager to see whether there's a torch-passing moment to CEO-in-waiting John Ternus. We're expecting to learn all about iOS 27, macOS 27, iPadOS 27, and a ton more Apple products. It's also been two years since Apple first promised an AI overhaul of its Siri assistant, and the company may finally debut the new Siri during the opening keynote.

WWDC 2026 will kick off with a live "special event" at Apple Park at 10 a.m. PT on Monday, June 8. You can tune into the livestream with us, and Mashable tech reporters will be providing live updates on every big reveal.

Keep checking back, as we'll be updating this page repeatedly throughout WWDC 2026, which officially runs through Friday, June 12.

WWDC stands for Worldwide Developers Conference, an annual Apple conference for software and hardware developers in the Apple ecosystem. The conference kicks off with an opening keynote, where Apple's CEO outlines upcoming updates to iOS, macOS, watchOS, iPadOS, tvOS, and visionOS. Occasionally, the company also announces new products at the keynote. Following the more consumer-friendly kickoff, the company hosts a series of panels and meetings for developers.