For years, AirPods Pro users have been asking Apple for something surprisingly basic: a proper place to manage their earbuds — not buried menus or scattered toggles hidden deep in Bluetooth settings. Just a clean, dedicated experience that makes controlling AirPods feel as polished as the hardware itself. Now, according to Mark Gurman of Bloomberg, Apple is finally preparing a major overhaul of the AirPods settings interface in iOS 27, iPadOS 27, and macOS 27.
AirPods have evolved far beyond simple wireless earbuds. Features like head gesture recognition, adaptive audio, hearing aid functionality, and advanced noise controls have made them increasingly complex devices. But the software experience managing those features still feels unfinished compared to products like the Apple Watch or Apple Vision Pro.
Apple’s AirPods settings might finally make sense
According to Gurman’s report, Apple is not expected to launch a standalone AirPods app just yet — something many users have been requesting for years. Instead, the company is reportedly redesigning the existing AirPods settings panel to make it more functional, easier to navigate, and better organized. This could make a massive difference in day-to-day use.
Right now, even basic AirPods controls can feel surprisingly fragmented. Some options live under Bluetooth menus, others appear only while the earbuds are connected, and newer accessibility features often require digging through multiple sections of Settings. Apple reportedly wants to streamline that experience and better highlight major AirPods features, rather than burying them.
AirPods are becoming more than accessories
The timing makes sense. Apple increasingly treats AirPods as smart wearable devices rather than simple audio accessories. The company has slowly added health-focused tools, gesture-based controls, and AI-driven audio experiences that rely heavily on software integration.

But the settings experience has not really evolved alongside the hardware. If these rumored changes arrive in iOS 27, they may not completely replace the need for a dedicated AirPods app.
