The new Siri AI has only just entered beta – and already there's speculation about whether Apple will one day make it a paid service. A recent report suggests that a subscription for Apple Intelligence is now more likely than it was two years ago. The reason lies, ironically, in the assistant's surprisingly solid beta performance.
The idea that Apple will one day introduce a paid version of Apple Intelligence has long been speculated – the current assessment essentially echoes speculation from 2024. What is new, however, is the timing: it will come after the new Siri AI launches as a beta version. According to Bloomberg's Power On newsletter, this very launch has made a potential subscription more likely. Nothing is confirmed – this is explicitly a prediction and should be read with caution.
Why a payment model is now considered more likely
The core of the argument revolves around the quality of the new assistant. Even in its current beta version, Siri AI is described as usable – and is expected to improve further in the coming months. The speculation is that the feature could become good enough, and above all popular enough, within the next twelve months for a paid version to actually become established.
This is the crucial difference to previous assumptions: As long as Siri was considered weak, a subscription model was hard to imagine. An assistant that proves its worth in everyday life, on the other hand, would be easier to position as a worthwhile paid service.
High AI costs as a driver
A second point concerns cost-effectiveness. Apple bears the high costs of AI features like Image Playground and conversations with Siri – services that rely on computationally intensive server models in the background. According to the report, this very expense increases the pressure to make users pay for their use.
As a consequence, the forecast predicts that precisely these two areas – conversations and image generation – could move into a paid tier. A third candidate would be so-called World Knowledge, meaning the assistant's general knowledge of the world. However, this is currently considered the weakest component of the new Siri AI, which is why monetization here seems less likely at first.
What iCloud+ already offers today
Such a tiered system wouldn't be entirely new. Apple has already confirmed that some Apple Intelligence features - including image generation - have daily usage limits because they rely on powerful server models. Those with an iCloud+ subscription receive a significantly higher allowance than users of the free tier.
The wording that expanded access is available with "most" iCloud+ plans suggests that the cheapest tier at €0.99 per month may be excluded, while higher-priced plans and Apple One bundles receive full access. This already provides a mechanism through which Apple could tier access to its most expensive AI features - a logical foundation for a future payment model.
Apple's starting position between lost and new trust
A standalone subscription would offer Apple a clear advantage and an equally clear disadvantage. The advantage: Siri AI is firmly integrated into the operating systems of the devices and therefore automatically available to a huge user base. The disadvantage: Apple has allowed Siri to deteriorate significantly over the years while working on this new version behind the scenes.
This creates a twofold challenge. Apple must win back those users who have long since written off Siri, while simultaneously attracting new ones. If this fails – and the next generation of Apple Intelligence doesn't improve significantly – launching a separate, paid service would be difficult.
Apple One as a possible alternative
Instead of a completely standalone subscription, Apple could integrate the AI features into its existing Apple One bundle. This bundle has remained largely unchanged in terms of content since its launch in 2020. Apple Intelligence would therefore be a way to enhance the offering and boost sales of the bundle without having to introduce a completely new paywall.
Siri AI: Whether the subscription will be available will only be decided next year
None of this is set in stone. The forecast is based on early impressions from a beta version and the economic logic behind the high costs of AI. Whether this actually becomes a paid model depends primarily on how much Siri AI improves over the next twelve months – and whether enough people would be willing to pay for an assistant that many of them had only recently abandoned. (Image: Apple)
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