Skip to main content

This is how iOS 19 will turn your AirPods into a Universal Translator

AirPods
Apple
Promotional logo for WWDC 2023.
This story is part of our complete Apple WWDC coverage
Updated less than 20 hours ago

Ever since the early days of Star Trek there has been a sci-dream of a Universal Translator that lets us all chat together, no matter our native tongue. That dream could become a reality with iOS 19 and AirPods.

According to Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurman, we can expect this live translation feature to appear with iOS 19, which will be leveraged by the AirPods.

Recommended Videos

It’s unclear at this early stage if this will be a feature for the current AirPods or if this will launch with the new AirPods Pro 3 that are also expected to arrive later this year.

What is clear is that you will be able to listen, while wearing your AirPods, and have Apple translate live.

How does live translation work?

The idea here is for the AirPods to pick up the audio in the room, using far field microphones and feed that to the connected iPhone.

The iPhone will do the grunt work of processing what’s being said in one language, translating it into the wearer’s native tongue, and playing that over the AirPods, live.

Usefully, this works both ways, allegedly. That will mean if the wearer answers in their native tongue, the iPhone will say it over the speaker in the other person’s own language.

So, in theory, the two should be able to have a relatively natural back and forth, without needing to understand each other’s language.

What’s not clear is if this will happen natively on the phone, or if it will require an internet connection. Presumably it will need a network connection, so having a decent one to ensure there is a lack of lag should be integral.

When will live translation come to AirPods?

Rumours suggest that this live translation feature will come as part of the next iOS 19 update. This is expected to be announced and launched in Apple’s usual cycle, meaning at WWDC 2025 in June.

Luke Edwards
Luke has over two decades of experience covering tech, science and health. Among many others, Luke writes about health tech…
5 lost iOS features I want to see return in iOS 19
Siri being shown on an iPhone 15 Pro on iOS 18.

In the second week of June, Apple will likely give the world a glimpse of its jazzed-up operating systems at WWDC 2025, and a major redesign is expected for iOS 19. Though I’ve always yearned for a return to the skeuomorphism look, we are hearing that Apple is eying a unified aesthetic language that is more reminiscent of Vision OS running on its uber-expensive headset.

A lot of eyes and ears will hunt for AI-related announcements, especially in the wake of Apple Intelligence flubs and delays. On the more practical side of things, an AI fitness coach might land this year with the iOS 19 update. But after going through all the hype and rumors, I hope Apple brings back the following features that it abandoned years ago, but with a modern makeover: 

Read more
4 things we expect to see at WWDC 2025, and 2 we don’t
WWDC invite on a phone.

Apple’s next developers conference will kick off on June 9th, and as expected, some notable software announcements are on the horizon. The big reveals are expected to be iOS 19, macOS 16, iPadOS 19, watchOS 12, visionOS 3, and tvOS 19, continuing the company's tradition of announcing major software upgrades midway through the year. 

The stakes this year, however, are higher than expected. All eyes will be on Apple and what it has to say about its AI approach, after having missed the early momentum against Google’s Android and some well-documented missteps with Apple Intelligence. 

Read more
How to keep your Apple devices safe from AirPlay attacks
Apple AirPlay streaming to another device.

Apple’s approach to building new features has always been rooted in safety and seamless convenience. Take, for example, AirPlay, a wireless standard created by the company that allows users to stream audio and video from one device to another.

AirPlay works not just across Apple devices, but also on TVs and speakers cleared by the company to offer the wireless streaming facility. That also makes it a ripe target for attacks, and it seems there are, in fact, vulnerabilities in the wireless lanes that could allow bad actors to seed malware and infect more connected devices. 

Read more