IOS 27 Keeps iPhone 11 Support, Limits Apple Intelligence to Newer Chips

What You Need to Know
- IPhone 11 remains minimum requirement for iOS 27, unchanged from previous release cycle.
- Apple Intelligence features limited to A17 Pro and M-series chips despite broader OS compatibility.
- IOS 27 supports 31 models across seven years, longer support tail than most Android manufacturers.
- Apple Intelligence capabilities will roll out gradually through point releases into early 2027.
The real story in Apple’s iOS 27 compatibility announcement is what didn’t change: the cutoff stays at iPhone 11, meaning Apple has now held that floor for two consecutive major releases.
That consistency is more deliberate than it looks. The iPhone 11 launched in 2019 with the A13 Bionic, and Apple has been quietly using that chip as the minimum threshold for Apple Intelligence features. Dropping support would strand users who bought a phone less than six years ago, which would generate the kind of press Apple prefers to avoid.
The full compatibility list spans 31 models across seven years of hardware, which is a longer tail than most Android manufacturers maintain. Google’s Pixel line typically guarantees seven years of OS updates for recent hardware, but that promise starts at purchase, not from a fixed cutoff year applied retroactively to older devices.
Apple Intelligence and the Asterisk
The broader Apple Intelligence upgrades teased for iOS 27 will not run equally across that entire list. Features requiring the Neural Engine at a certain performance tier have historically been limited to A17 Pro and M-series chips, meaning iPhone 11 through iPhone 15 standard models may receive iOS 27 but miss the headline AI features entirely. Apple tends to bury those distinctions in footnotes rather than leading with them at WWDC.
The September release window is standard. What matters between now and then is which Apple Intelligence capabilities Apple actually ships at launch versus which ones arrive in point releases through early 2027, a pattern that has repeated across the last two iOS cycles.
For most users upgrading from iOS 26, the compatibility news changes nothing. The list is the same. The floor held. The more interesting question is whether that floor stays at iPhone 11 for a third year or finally moves up once the A13 installed base shrinks enough that the PR math shifts.
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