When Apple unveils its next macOS at WWDC 2026, a new report says that it will have a slightly redesigned Liquid Glass interface, though really just the same design iterations the company has always done.

Liquid Glass has had vocal critics, but just as with every version of macOS before, Apple is going to refine and mildly redesign it each year. According to Bloomberg, this year's revision is chiefly concerned with the appearance of different Mac elements with Liquid Glass.

Specifically, the "slight redesign" is to concentrate on improving various readability issues. Where those have arisen so far, it's been in Liquid Glass's transparency and shadow effects, so presumably that is what Apple will work on.

This is the same thing Apple does after every significant redesign, starting with the toning down of the Aqua interface in the first years of Mac OS X. It was perhaps most noticeable with iOS 7 which debuted a very flat design that over the next years was slowly improved and clarified.

Speaking of iOS, though, the report also says that Apple's work on the next version of this will include a benefit for macOS 27. Apple is said to be working to have tabs in Safari automatically organize themselves, as can already be done in rival browsers.

Tab Groups is definitely an area that needs attention, and not only because elements of it are better on other browsers. Many years ago, Apple added an option to Shortcuts on the Mac that was supposed to let users switch automatically between Tab Groups, but to this day the Shortcut action fails with an "internal error."

It does work perfectly on iOS and iPadOS, though, so hopes that improvements on those platforms will come to the Mac as well could yet be wishful thinking.