Apple’s third delay of its smart home display is not a hardware problem. The device has been ready for months. What the company will not say outright, but what Bloomberg and every follow-up report make clear, is that the product’s spine is voice. By naming Siri explicitly as the reason for the push to fall 2026, Apple has admitted that its voice stack is still not ready for the home and that it would rather slip again than ship a hub that underperforms where it matters most.
The Delay Is a Siri Admission, Not a Generic AI Wait
Bloomberg reported in March 2026 that Apple postponed the smart home display launch as it waits for new AI and Siri. The device, codenamed J490 and often called “HomePad” in reports, was originally targeted for spring 2025, then early 2026, and is now expected in fall 2026. Multiple outlets, including MacRumors, CNET, and Digital Trends, have since confirmed that the delay is tied directly to an unfinished, chatbot-style overhaul of Siri. Apple plans to ship the display only once this next-generation Siri—rebuilt with large language model capabilities and conversational AI—is ready. The hardware itself, a 7-inch square iPad-like unit that can sit on a speaker base or wall-mount, has been finished for months; the blocker is the software.
The home display is therefore a litmus test for Apple’s voice strategy: if Siri cannot meet the bar for the living room, the company will not ship. That bar is set by Amazon and Google, whose assistants have had years of iteration in real homes. Apple’s refusal to launch without a competitive Siri is the buried detail that separates this delay from a generic “waiting on AI” narrative.
That makes the smart display different from a generic “we are waiting on AI” story. Apple could have shipped a dumb display or a thin wrapper around existing HomeKit controls. It chose not to. The explicit linkage to Siri in the reporting indicates that voice is the product’s centre of gravity: the device is meant to function as a central AI and voice-controlled hub. Without a Siri that can handle complex commands, in-app tasks, and consistent behaviour across Apple’s ecosystem, the product would underdeliver on that promise. According to CNET and MacRumors, engineers are still wrestling with accuracy, complex command handling, and reliable interaction between the new Siri and other Apple AI models. Until those are solved, the display stays in the drawer.
Reuters reported in March 2025 that Apple had already stated that “it’s going to take us longer than we thought” to deliver a more personalised Siri with greater context awareness and cross-app functionality. The 2026 delay is the continuation of that timeline. The Verge and Engadget have both noted that the revamped Siri is now expected later in 2026, likely alongside iOS updates and the iPhone 18 Pro in September. So the buried detail is not that Apple is waiting on “AI” in the abstract—it is that it is waiting specifically on Siri, and that the home display is the first major product to be held back by that dependency.
What This Actually Means
Apple is betting that brand damage from a weak, voice-heavy product would be worse than the damage from being late. The smart home display is positioned as a premium hub; shipping it with a Siri that still stumbles on multi-step requests or fails to complete in-app actions would invite comparisons to Amazon and Google, whose voice assistants have had years of iteration in the home. The delay is therefore a strategic choice: cede timing to protect positioning. The downside is that Amazon and Google continue to extend their lead in installed base and habit while Apple’s home strategy remains in a holding pattern. For anyone asking why the display is delayed, the answer is not “AI” in a vague sense—it is that Siri is the spine of the product, and Apple’s voice stack is still not ready for prime time in the living room.
What Is Apple’s Smart Home Display (HomePad)?
Apple’s smart home display, codenamed J490 and informally referred to as “HomePad” in the press, is an unreleased device designed to sit in the home as a central control and information hub. It is built around a 7-inch square touchscreen, similar in concept to a small iPad, and can be used with a half-domed speaker base or wall-mounted. According to MacRumors and Digital Trends, it will run a version of tvOS 27 and is intended to support facial recognition so it can identify household members and show personalised content such as calendar events, reminders, and music preferences. The device is explicitly designed to be driven by an upgraded, AI-powered Siri; without that Siri, Apple has decided not to launch it. A more ambitious variant with a robotic arm that tilts and swivels the display has been pushed to 2027.
Sources
Bloomberg, MacRumors, Digital Trends, CNET, Reuters, The Verge