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Apple unveils new AI-powered accessibility features across iPhone, Mac, and Vision Pro

Apple Intelligence is coming to accessibility features across its ecosystem

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Apple has announced a major set of accessibility updates across iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Vision Pro, and Apple TV, with many of the new features powered by Apple Intelligence. The company says the updates are designed to make devices more useful for users with visual, hearing, mobility, and learning disabilities while maintaining Apple’s privacy-focused approach to AI.

The new accessibility features will roll out later this year as part of Apple’s upcoming software updates.

Apple is bringing AI into accessibility features

One of the biggest updates focuses on VoiceOver and Magnifier for users who are blind or have low vision. Apple says VoiceOver’s new “Image Explorer” feature can now provide more detailed descriptions of photos, scanned documents, bills, and other visual content using Apple Intelligence. Users will also be able to ask follow-up questions about what the camera sees through the iPhone’s Action button.

Magnifier is also getting AI-powered visual descriptions and voice controls. Users can ask spoken commands such as “zoom in” or “turn on flashlight” while using the feature.

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Apple is additionally improving Voice Control with natural-language interactions. Instead of memorising exact button labels, users can now describe what they see on screen with phrases like “tap the purple folder” or “open the restaurant guide.” The company says this should make navigating apps easier for users with physical disabilities.

Generated subtitles and smarter reading features

Apple is also introducing automatically generated subtitles for videos without captions. The feature uses on-device speech recognition to create subtitles privately for personal videos, streamed content, and clips shared by friends or family. Generated subtitles will work across iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, and Apple Vision Pro.

Another update expands Accessibility Reader, which is aimed at users with dyslexia or low vision. The feature will now support more complex content such as scientific articles with columns, tables, and images. AI-generated summaries and built-in translation tools are also being added.

Apple Vision Pro gains eye-controlled wheelchair support

One of the more notable announcements involves Apple Vision Pro. Apple says users with compatible alternative wheelchair drive systems will soon be able to control power wheelchairs using Vision Pro’s eye-tracking system. The feature will initially support Tolt and LUCI systems in the US.

The company also announced additional Vision Pro accessibility updates, including face gestures, improved Dwell Control, and motion sickness reduction tools for passengers in moving vehicles.

Why these features matter

Accessibility has long been a major focus area for Apple, but the latest updates show how AI is increasingly becoming part of assistive technology. Instead of positioning AI only as a productivity or chatbot tool, Apple is integrating it into real-world accessibility functions such as visual understanding, navigation, reading assistance, and communication.

The company is also continuing to emphasize on-device processing and privacy, especially as AI-generated features become more common across consumer devices. Apple says the new accessibility features will launch later this year across its ecosystem. The company is expected to share more details during WWDC, where it will likely showcase how Apple Intelligence powers these updates across iOS, iPadOS, macOS, and visionOS.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
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