Apple CarPlay gets a major upgrade behind the scenes — here’s what’s new

08/12/2025

Apple is turning your car’s dashboard into a smarter, more personal cockpit. The incoming iOS 26.2 update, due mid-December 2025, sharpens Apple CarPlay’s focus on customization and practical on-screen information, especially for vehicles with expansive infotainment displays. If you drive with CarPlay visible all the time, the update makes what you see more useful and less intrusive. iOS 26 already overhauled CarPlay in September with a cleaner layout, configurable widgets, subtler notifications and the divisive “Liquid” Glass art style. Now 26.2 builds on that foundation by expanding widget capacity: large displays can show three widgets at once instead of two.

That extra panel changes how you use the screen — imagine live sports scores, your current playlist and a rotating selection of favourite photos all visible together, courtesy of the Live Activities feature introduced in the previous release. It’s a small change that significantly boosts glanceable usefulness, reducing the need to swap apps while you’re on the move. Messaging gets a practical tweak too. The Messages app introduced a pinned-contacts view that hoists important conversations — like family or close friends — to the top of the list. For some drivers that prioritisation was welcome; for others it felt intrusive. iOS 26.2 lets you switch that behaviour off, returning the inbox to a chronological flow if you prefer. It’s a neat example of Apple listening to different driving styles and giving choices rather than one enforced layout. Compatibility is straightforward: anyone with an iPhone 11 or newer can install iOS 26.2, so a broad swathe of users will gain the improvements without buying new hardware.

The emphasis is clearly on delivering smarter in-car interactions that reduce distraction and keep essential information within sight. For drivers curious about the most advanced step in Apple’s in-car ambitions, there’s CarPlay Ultra — a deeper integration rolled out earlier this year. That platform is more than a mirror of your phone: it’s an interface co-designed with automakers to display bespoke, vehicle-specific instruments and controls. Currently, CarPlay Ultra is only available in Aston Martin models, where it offers fully customisable gauges and the rare convenience of controlling certain car systems without leaving the CarPlay environment. Adjusting climate settings or switching drive modes can be done inside the software, so you don’t need to jump back to the native car UI. It’s a glimpse of future cockpits where the phone and the vehicle are functionally blended. If you’re shopping for a new car and Apple CarPlay is a must-have, most mainstream new models now include it as standard.

Check the specification sheets at dealerships or manufacturer's websites to confirm whether the version installed is the standard CarPlay or the deeper CarPlay Ultra, and whether specific trims or options are required. For existing cars, the iOS 26.2 update will be the easiest way to expand what your current infotainment can do without changing the vehicle itself. In short: iOS 26.2 doesn’t reinvent Apple CarPlay, but it sharpens its utility. More widgets, smarter live information, and better control over messaging behaviour make the in-car phone experience less distracting and more tailored to individual needs. For drivers with large screens, the update makes a noticeable difference to daily usability; for tech-savvy buyers, CarPlay Ultra points the way toward fully integrated digital cockpits.