Apple has pushed out iOS 26.3 and iPadOS 26.3 today, and while it’s not the flashiest update, there’s a security fix in here for a vulnerability that was already being exploited in the wild. That alone should be enough to make you install it sooner rather than later.
The bigger talking point, though, is the new built-in tool that lets you transfer your data to an Android phone without needing a third-party app. Photos, messages, notes, apps, passwords, phone numbers — it handles the lot. If you’ve ever tried switching ecosystems before and given up halfway through because the process was a mess, this is aimed squarely at fixing that.

The EU has been quick to take credit for it, and to be fair, they did push both Apple and Google to make cross-platform switching less painful. But here’s the thing worth noting: the requirement only applied within the EU. Apple and Google chose to roll this out globally on their own, which is a rare case of both companies going further than they strictly had to.
There’s also a new setting tucked into iOS 26.3 that limits carrier location tracking on devices running Apple’s C1 or C1X modems. It doesn’t work with every carrier — so far it’s limited to Boost Mobile in the US, EE and BT in the UK, and Telekom in Germany — but it’s a step towards giving users more say over who’s tracking where they are and when.