Apple has removed references to âmacOS 16â and other placeholder names from the developer betas set to debut at WWDC.
Appleâs operating systems are set to receive an entirely new numbering system, and we now have an additional sign that the âiOS 26â rebrand is coming.
On May 28, a report from a generally reliable source indicated that Apple plans to simplify its numbering system for operating system versions. In an attempt to make things easier for end users, all of the companyâs operating systems will bear the version number 26, a reference to the year 2026.
AppleInsider has already confirmed that Apple is moving forward with the rebrand. The same day, we explained that the iPhone maker was still using placeholder names for some of its operating systems, but this appears to have changed ahead of WWDC.
People familiar with Appleâs pre-release operating systems and their variants speaking to AppleInsider have told us that placeholder names such as macOS 16 have finally been removed from the developer betas set to debut on June 9.
The upcoming release of macOS, for instance, is simply labeled âmacOS Beta,â with a generic icon featuring the name âmacOS.â The version 26 identifier remains present within the operating system, AppleInsider was told.
In 2024, the first developer beta of macOS Sequoia was labeled âmacOS 15 Betaâ and used an icon from the previous release, macOS Sonoma. Judging by the recent changes and the new â26â version number, Apple wants to make its latest assortment of operating systems visually distinct.
During development, macOS 26 used images and assets from macOS Sequoia, and internal builds from late 2024 were labeled macOS 16. The name âmacOS 16â was in use until late May 2025, meaning that the removal of placeholder names is a recent change. It appears to have been made in preparation for WWDC 2025.
In terms of file size, the first macOS 26 developer beta will be just over 17 GB, while the September 2025 final release variant is expected to be around 2GB larger, at more than 19 GB. While macOS 26 is set to deliver plenty of new features, the difference in file size suggests some of them wonât be available at launch.
The operating system itself wonât be available for all Macs, either. As we previously reported, macOS 26 is set to drop support for the 2017 iMac Pro, 2018 Mac mini, and all 2018 MacBook Pro models, among others.
Separately, AppleInsider is also able to confirm that the operating systemâs successor is in the early stages of development. Codenamed âHoneycrisp,â internal builds are currently labeled âmacOS 17.0.â Itâs unclear why Apple is using the old numbering system for Honeycrisp, but itâs likely just a placeholder.
Apple will debut its next-gen operating systems at its Worldwide Developersâ Conference, with a keynote event scheduled for June 9, 2025.
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