App Intents Replace SiriKit, Reshaping How Third-Party Apps Connect to Apple’s AI

Published by Carl Sanson on

App Intents Replace SiriKit, Reshaping How Third-Party Apps Connect to Apple's AI — AI

What You Need to Know

  • SiriKit is deprecated; App Intents are now required for Siri and Apple ecosystem integration.
  • Apps without App Intents lose access to Siri, Spotlight, Shortcuts, Widgets, Lock Screen, and Action Button.
  • App Intents function as structured descriptions enabling Apple’s AI to determine available app capabilities.
  • EU users lack Siri AI features due to regulatory friction, creating uneven developer investment returns.

Apple’s smarter Siri attracted the most applause at WWDC 2026, but developers absorbed a quieter announcement that will reshape how apps connect to everything Apple builds next: SiriKit is deprecated, and App Intents are now the required path forward.

SiriKit served as the bridge between third-party apps and Siri for years. Apple has been nudging developers toward App Intents for several WWDC cycles, but deprecation warnings and formal documentation changes turn that nudge into a deadline. Apps that delay migration do not just lose Siri access; they lose visibility across Spotlight, Shortcuts, Widgets, Lock Screen actions, and the Action Button.

That scope is the part worth sitting with. App Intents are not a voice feature. They are a structured description of what an app can do, and Apple’s AI layer reads that description to decide what it can offer users. A task manager that exposes its actions through App Intents becomes something Siri can query, update, and automate. One that does not becomes invisible to the same system.

The EU Wrinkle

The competitive pressure this creates is uneven across markets. EU iPhone and iPad users are missing Siri AI features entirely due to regulatory friction, which means the App Intents investment pays off unevenly depending on where a developer’s users are located. The Siri AI rollout delay tied to EU compliance also means developers building for those markets are migrating toward a system their users cannot fully use yet.

The hardware floor for the new Siri experience is relatively accessible. Most Apple Intelligence features on iOS 27 run on iPhone 15 Pro and later, M1 iPads, and any Apple silicon Mac, which limits the fragmentation problem somewhat.

What makes this transition structurally interesting is how cross-platform the App Intents framework has become, landing consistently across iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple Watch. Apple is not building separate AI hooks per device. The intent layer is shared, which means a single migration effort covers the entire ecosystem rather than requiring platform-by-platform work.

Source: Apple Just Killed SiriKit, and Developers Should Be Concerned (macobserver.com)

Categories: News

Carl Sanson

Carl Sanson is a writer and tech reviewer at Guide4Mac, specializing in the MacBook and Mac desktop lineup. Having grown up during Apple’s shift from Intel to its own custom chips, Carl has a natural interest in how hardware performance translates to everyday productivity. He spends most of his time testing the limits of macOS on everything from the entry-level MacBook Air to high-end Mac Pro setups. Whether he’s troubleshooting a system update or comparing the latest M-series processors, Carl’s goal is to provide straightforward, honest advice that helps users choose the right Mac for their needs. When he isn't benchmarking hardware, he’s usually experimenting with new productivity apps or refining his desk setup.

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