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Home»News»Apple is working on its own Grammarly-inspired keyboard
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Apple is working on its own Grammarly-inspired keyboard

News RoomBy News Room31 March 20263 Mins Read
Apple is working on its own Grammarly-inspired keyboard
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Apple, in its infinite wisdom and very measured pace, has finally decided to tackle one of humanity’s greatest problems: our inability to write decent sentences on iPhones.

Yes, according to recent reports, the company is working on a Grammarly-style, AI-powered keyboard that will offer real-time suggestions for grammar, tone, and clarity. In simpler terms, your iPhone is about to become that one friend who politely rewrites your texts so you don’t sound unhinged at 2 AM.

And honestly? About time.

Apple’s Late Entry Into A Very Crowded Party

Let’s not pretend this is groundbreaking. Grammarly has existed for years. Google has been stuffing AI into everything short of your toaster. And OpenAI turned writing assistance into a cultural phenomenon.

Meanwhile, Apple has been… refining. Polishing. Thinking.

So this move feels less like innovation and more like Apple finally saying, “Fine, we’ll do it too – but we’ll make it ours.”

The difference, of course, is integration. Apple doesn’t win by being first. It wins by embedding features so deeply into the system that you forget life without them ever existed. And putting AI directly into the keyboard – the one place every user interacts with daily – is exactly that kind of move.

Because let’s face it: nobody wants to open an app to fix a sentence. We barely want to fix it at all.

The Siri Redemption Arc (Maybe)

What makes this more interesting is how it ties into Apple’s bigger AI ambitions – particularly Siri, the assistant that has spent the last decade being… politely useless.

The upgraded Siri is rumored to handle multiple commands at once. So instead of asking three separate things like a Victorian child, you can finally say:
“Set a reminder, text my boss, and check the weather,”
and expect it to just work.

Combine that with a keyboard that fixes your tone before you accidentally sound passive-aggressive, and Apple might finally have something resembling a coherent AI experience. That’s the key here – not flashy features, but everyday usefulness.

The Real Goal: Owning Your Workflow

Apple’s strategy is becoming painfully obvious: don’t build standalone AI tools—own the entire flow of how you think, write, and communicate. With features like Writing Tools, AI rewriting, summarization, and now a smart keyboard, Apple is quietly turning iOS into a productivity layer that works behind the scenes. You type, it improves. You ask, it executes. You think less, it does more.

Convenient? Absolutely.

Slightly unsettling? Also yes.

Because the more your device “helps,” the more it subtly shapes how you communicate. Today it’s fixing grammar. Tomorrow it’s suggesting what you should say. And let’s be honest – some of you probably need that.

Why This Actually Matters

Here’s the uncomfortable truth: this is exactly the kind of AI that will stick. Not AI that writes essays you didn’t ask for. Not AI that generates art you didn’t need. But AI that quietly makes your emails sharper, your texts less embarrassing, and your notes more coherent.

Apple

That’s the real battleground. Not creativity. Not intelligence. Convenience.

If Apple gets this right, it won’t just compete with Grammarly – it will make Grammarly irrelevant on iOS.

All signs point to this arriving with iOS 27, likely at WWDC 2026

And if Apple follows its usual playbook, this won’t be the final form – it’ll be version one of something much bigger. Expect deeper personalization. Smarter context. Maybe even a keyboard that knows what you’re about to say before you do. Because if Apple has its way, the future of writing isn’t just assisted.

It’s quietly co-authored.

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