Skip to content
Thoughtful, detailed coverage of everything Apple for 34 years
and the TidBITS Content Network for Apple professionals
17 comments

iOS 15, iPadOS 15, watchOS 8, and tvOS 15 Now Available

Today is the day. Apple has released iOS 15, iPadOS 15, watchOS 8, and tvOS 15. Apple’s servers will probably be slammed with all the traffic, and there may be first-day bugs. If you’re the sort who installs new operating systems right away, go ahead—the betas have been stable—but we recommend that most people wait at least a week or two. If you’re particularly upgrade-shy, Apple is finally allowing users to stick with iOS 14 and iPadOS 14, which will continue to receive security updates. Nevertheless, we always recommend upgrading eventually, when it’s convenient and sensible for you (see “Why You Should Upgrade (On Your Own Terms),” 4 September 2015).

iOS 15 and iPadOS 15

iOS 15 and iPadOS 15 offer a slew of new features. Here are the highlights:

  • Massively improved FaceTime, with many of the features you’ve become accustomed to in videoconferencing apps like Zoom
  • Shared With You collections in Messages, Photos, and other apps for bringing together content and links that people share with you
  • Focus, which is like a more customizable Do Not Disturb. You can create multiple Focuses that allow notifications only from specified apps or contacts.
  • Time-sensitive notifications (like reminders that go off at a particular time) that can optionally break through a Focus. Plus, notifications are now slimmer and have more prominent icons.
  • Notification summaries, which bundle notifications that aren’t time-critical and display them to you at set times during the day
  • Significant Safari changes, including the address bar moving to the bottom of the screen in iOS (so it’s easier to reach), Tab Groups, which let you organize tabs by topic or project, and voice search
  • Live Text in Photos, which lets you do things like copy text from photos or search for text in photos
  • New iCloud+ features, like Private Relay and Hide My Email
  • Redesigned Memories in Photos
  • A redesigned Weather app in iOS 15 that includes notifications for rain and other weather events. (Sadly and increasingly weirdly, Apple still has no Weather app for iPadOS. Maybe next year.)
  • More discoverable multitasking capabilities on the iPad, thanks to a Multitasking menu at the top center of every window and a shelf at the bottom that shows open windows within an app
  • App Library and Home screen widgets on the iPad. These features work just like they do in iOS 14, albeit with larger widgets on the iPad.
  • Quick Note, which lets you create a note with a swipe up from the corner of the screen on an iPad

iOS 15 and iPadOS 15 support the same devices as iOS 14 and iPadOS 14, meaning everything back to 2015’s iPhone 6s and 2014’s iPad Air 2. Kudos to Apple for continuing to keep these older devices on the train. However, some features require newer devices, specifically the A12 Bionic processor or later. See “The Real System Requirements for Apple’s 2021 Operating Systems” (11 June 2021) for details on those.

My new book, Take Control of iOS 15 and iPadOS 15, covers these topics in detail, and we have articles planned to go in-depth on what we consider to be the most interesting features of iOS 15 and iPadOS 15 in the coming weeks. I’ve been running these betas all summer, and they’ve been very stable for me. Nor have I heard about major problems from other beta testers. However, there could be subtle but problematic bugs that won’t become obvious until these operating systems are running on millions of devices.

Apple decided to delay some promised features for later releases:

  • SharePlay, which let you watch movies or listen to music with others over FaceTime
  • Screen sharing over FaceTime
  • Legacy Contacts, which let you designate someone to inherit your iCloud data upon your death. It was available in earlier betas (I even have my QR code printed out) but won’t return until later.
  • App Privacy Report. Apple apparently planned to delay this from the start. If it’s like App Tracking Transparency from iOS 15, I would expect it to arrive around iOS 15.5 or so.

You can install iOS 15 and iPadOS 15 in Settings > General > Software Update—you’ll likely need to tap Upgrade to iOS 15 at the bottom of the screen. On an iPhone 11 Pro, iOS 15 clocks in at 3.24 GB. On an old iPad Air 2, iPadOS 15 is only 2.43 GB, perhaps because it doesn’t include code for unsupported features.

iOS 15 update process

watchOS 8

The watchOS 8 update isn’t quite as exciting as iOS 15, but it still includes many nice improvements:

  • Better photo support, including Portrait mode watch faces, better Memories support, and easier sharing of photos
  • A redesigned Home app that better supports security cameras and scenes and displays status symbols for devices
  • The option to edit text with the Digital Crown
  • The capability to look up and share animated GIFs in messages
  • Find My apps for locating lost devices from your wrist
  • A redesigned Music app that makes sharing easier
  • A new Mindfulness app that replaces the Breathe app
  • The capability to track your sleeping respiratory rate

watchOS 8 update process

To install the update, which was 1.2 GB for an Apple Watch Series 4, open the Watch app on your iPhone and go to My Watch > General > Software Update. Remember that the download will take a while, after which the iPhone has to transfer the update to your Apple Watch through Bluetooth, which can take a couple of hours. Then, to install the update, the Apple Watch must have at least 50% charge and be connected to a charger. We recommend performing the upgrade at night.

tvOS 15

As usual, tvOS 15 didn’t get as much attention as the higher-profile operating systems. Apple delayed its main feature, SharePlay, for a future release. However, there are still a few welcome changes in tvOS 15:

  • A For All of You section in the TV app, which tries to suggest content your entire household will enjoy, based on your preferences
  • Shared with You, which displays shows and movies shared with you from Messages in iOS 15
  • Spatial audio support for AirPods Pro and AirPods Max, plus smart audio routing for AirPods
  • The capability to view multiple HomeKit cameras at once
  • Stereo sound when you pair two HomePod mini speakers to an Apple TV 4K

tvOS 15 supports the Apple TV HD and Apple TV 4K.

To install the update, go to Settings > System > Software Update, or just let it install on its own at some point in the future.

HomePod Software Version 15

Finally, Apple quietly released HomePod Software Version 15. In what seems like a slight change in iOS 15’s version of the Home app, an icon for Update Downloading appears at the top of the screen. Tapping it reveals more information about the update, revealing what’s new:

  • As noted above, you can now use the HomePod mini (by itself or in a stereo pair) with an Apple TV 4K.
  • Media playback controls now appear on your iPhone’s Lock screen when a HomePod mini is playing nearby.
  • You can use Siri on a HomePod to turn on and control an Apple TV.
  • Siri automatically adjusts its volume based on the room environment and how you’ve set the loudness.
  • You can ask Siri to control HomeKit devices at a specific time—”Hey Siri, turn off the kitchen lights in 5 minutes.”
  • If you have HomeKit accessories with Siri support, you can use them to control the HomePod.
  • If you have a security camera that supports HomeKit Secure Video, your HomePod can theoretically now alert you when a package arrives at your door.

HomePod 15 release notes

Subscribe today so you don’t miss any TidBITS articles!

Every week you’ll get tech tips, in-depth reviews, and insightful news analysis for discerning Apple users. For over 33 years, we’ve published professional, member-supported tech journalism that makes you smarter.

Registration confirmation will be emailed to you.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA. The Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Comments About iOS 15, iPadOS 15, watchOS 8, and tvOS 15 Now Available

Notable Replies

  1. Also, as I just discovered, updates (15) for HomePod and HomePod Mini. I’ve installed 15 on my iPhone 12 Pro and my (last generation) iPad Mini. Waiting for my AW5 to reach 50% charge before installing WatchOS 8.

  2. iPadOS 15 installation totally screws up the icon arrangement on the first page, adding without asking several large widgets and pushing icons back to the second page (and others too if subsequent pages were full). Then after removing the widgets and attempting to recreate my original arrangement, I found that they had changed the number of rows and columns allowed (at least on the iPad Air 2 I tested an install on). This is a likely very significant user UI annoyance. Be aware, for yourself, and those you support. Surprise!

    Does iOS do this too?

  3. No, it’s very similar to 14. There are UI differences (as I just discovered opening Safari to answer this) but I don’t notice changes to the top level.

  4. There are complaints about iPadOS15 here:

    The report of the Home app problems is a concern for me. I think I’ll wait before upgrading.

  5. Totally agree. One of the things I liked most about iPadOS 14.x was how the app icons stayed the same, page to page, regardless of whether you were in portrait or landscape mode. I put apps in places for easier viewing by my technophobic spouse. Now 15.x has taken it upon itself to %$*#! that up. Not happy. I should note that this is on a 2016-model 9.7-inch Pad Pro, so it may well be that things are not so screwed up on the newer, bigger screens of more recent models. Still, it would be nice if Apple had provided a way to add widgets to a new front page without changing the other pages. That would at least have mitigated some of the annoyances, although certainly not the change in number of icons per page nor the way they move around when you switch between portrait and landscape.

  6. I don’t wish ill-will on first installers but I’ve learned not to touch any new iOS/OS from Apple until .1 or .2 of it.
    (notes that I saw the Safari search bar is at the bottom, but can be changed back with the “aA” button, and then Show Top Address Bar or via Settings/Safari/Tabs set to single Tab.)

  7. (The snippet is from the MacRumors excerpt that appeared in @mpainesyd’s post above.) I thought there was no downgrade mechanism for iPhones and iPads. Would someone point me to a step-by-step description of what I would before upgrading to have this capability and how I would execute the downgrade if I chose to do so?


    Edit. The answer to my question is at Update from iOS 13 to iOS 14 after iOS 15 is out - #2 by Shamino. Thanks, @Shamino.

  8. Downgrading isn’t the same. The procedure I described lets you upgrade to a specific signed image file.

    If your phone’s current version is newer than the one you want to install, I don’t think it will work.

    You can option-click the “Restore” button to downgrade to a signed image you have downloaded, but that will erase your device, resetting it to factory settings. You can’t restore from a backup, because doing so will upgrade you to the newest version.

    Data stored on cloud servers (e.g. Notes, IMAP e-mail folders), will automatically sync, but you’ll need to manually reinstall apps (from the App Store) and re-sync documents and media from copies stored elsewhere, so make sure you aren’t keeping your only copy of any content on the phone!

    If you are using a third party tool like iMazing, you might be able to restore data from a backup after downgrading iOS, but I’ve never done this so I don’t know how well it will work.

  9. There is cautious advice here:
    https://www.stellarinfo.com/article/how-to-downgrade-ios.php
    “If you have decided to go back to the previous iOS , you can easily do it.But remember there’s the biggest risk is of losing your iPhone/ iPad data as the process completely wipes iPhone data… Backing up iPhone to iCloud or iTunes after upgrading to the latest iOS doesn’t help as this backup file won’t work once you have downgraded to the older iOS .”… " There’s only a limited time window for you to downgrade iOS as Apple needs to ‘sign’ the old version of iOS before you downgrade. And Apple usually stops signing the older iOS version within a few days of the new iOS release."
    I think I will wait for xx.1 ! For iPhone & iPad.

    However my ATV & Homepods are working well after upgrading to 15.

  10. I wonder why Apple thinks it knows how to organise and arrange my iPad screens better than I do.
    I also wonder why Apple keeps fiddling with these minor things.

  11. Beware of new bug already: iPhone Storage Almost Full notification may show up. And its mostly wrong as this was posted by someone with 50GB available.
    Solution: ignore it until Apple pushes a fix out.

  12. It’s not just that. For some it’s reporting more size available than the total capacity of their device. Not as annoying though as when the bug leads to the opposite and people get a bogus badge pushed into their face they can no longer get rid of.

    Millions of beta test installs and something like this goes to market unnoticed? Wow.

  13. If you are unable to use Apple Music on your new iPhone or iPad, Apple Music bug found. And Apple recommends patch.

  14. After update to tvos15, the settings on my apple tv 4k indicates that i need to “Update apple id settings” but this doesn’t seem to be possible. Clicking on the notification has no effect, nor does signing out and back in to Store/iCloud/Game centre under Users and Accounts. In the meantime it seems to work ok……!

  15. One thing that I have noticed with iOS 15 and watchOS 8 is that unlocking the watch with the iPhone is much more consistent. Since (I think…) 14.7 my watch would only unlock by unlocking the iPhone if I had at least one interaction with the locked watch on my wrist before the phone would be able to unlock the watch, and if the watch remained locked with the phone unlocked, I’d have to lock and unlock the phone again before the phone would unlock the watch. iOS 15 and watchOS 8 have fixed that for me.

  16. An update on the ATV and Homepods… I have stereo Homepods as the default audio output for the ATV 4K. It is still working well after the 15 update. However, when playing music via the ATV, I have noticed that after several minutes the +/- “buttons” on the Homepods sometimes go out. If I tap the top of a Homepod it pauses the music. So I can no longer reliably change the volume via the top of the Homepods.
    I hope that Apple is not neglecting the original (discontinued!) Homepods in its testing of software updates.

  17. I have a stereo set of original HomePods in my living room and a HomePod Mini run my bedroom. For both sets, I either change volume from the source or via Siri. Samples of the various Siri commands (always prefaced by “Hey Siri”):

    1. “Louder” or “Raise the volume” or “Volume Up”
    2. “Softer” or “Lower the Volume’” or “Volume Down”
      For fine tuning:
    3. “What’s the Volume” and then “Set volume to ‘x’ percent”

Join the discussion in the TidBITS Discourse forum

Participants

Avatar for jcenters Avatar for Simon Avatar for aforkosh Avatar for schinder Avatar for m.hedley Avatar for jdkw Avatar for schwartz Avatar for ddmiller Avatar for mpainesyd Avatar for Bryce_Wray Avatar for Will_M Avatar for Shamino Avatar for macanix