Apple is reportedly now testing a feature for the forthcoming revamp of Siri that will allow users to ask several things at once.

Back in 2023, Apple added the ability for Siri to take back to back commands, asking one after another without pausing to say "Siri," or "Hey, Siri." Now according to Bloomberg, the expected reworking of Siri with Apple Intelligence will go much further.

Specifically, users will no longer have to ask Siri to do something, then pause and ask for something else. So a sentence such as "Start a timer for 15 minutes, then tell me what the weather is," should work.

Currently being tested, this feature is reportedly due to appear in iOS 27, macOS 27, and iPadOS 27, which will be announced at WWDC 2026.

Unspecified sources familiar with Apple's plans also say that at present, certain new Siri features are being labelled internally as "Preview." This could mean them either coming later than the initial launches of iOS 27 and the others, or it may mean that they are released as beta test versions.

Reportedly, this particular feature is part of Apple's ambition to have Siri compete better with other AI voice assistants such as ChatGPT. As part of this, Siri is expected to also work as a chatbot that will summarize internet information through what Apple calls World Knowledge Answers.

These are just some of the features that have been expected for the new Siri. Despite multiple rumors predicting a release alongside iOS 26.4, though, it has recently seemed more likely that Apple will announce the new features at WWDC.

If Apple stays true to form, though, this means the new Siri may be available to developers and beta testers in June 2026 — but the public won't see it until September.

Given that an improved Siri was one of the major promises when Apple Intelligence was announced in June 2024, that makes it over two years late.