Apple’s Siri pitch is collides with a legal reality. The company has agreed to a proposed $250 million settlement in a U.S. class action that accused it of marketing advanced Apple Intelligence Siri features before they were actually ready. Court filings show the settlement motion was filed on May 5, 2026, and Apple has not admitted wrongdoing.

Apple unveiled Apple Intelligence at WWDC on June 10, 2024, describing a system that could draw on personal context, understand what is on screen, and take action across apps. That framing made Siri look less like a basic voice trigger and more like a deeply integrated assistant.

But when Apple Intelligence started rolling out on October 28, 2024 with iOS 18.1, it was only the first wave. Apple itself said more capable Siri features, including personal context, would arrive later “in the months to come.” That distinction is key to the lawsuit, which argued buyers of supported devices could have come away with the wrong impression during the iPhone 16 launch cycle.

There is also outside pressure beyond the courtroom. On April 22, 2025, the National Advertising Division said Apple should modify or discontinue certain Apple Intelligence availability claims. NAD concluded that “Available Now” language could reasonably suggest that multiple headline features were ready at the iPhone 16 launch, and it said Apple had permanently discontinued the “More Personal Siri” demo during the inquiry.

That is the bigger story here. In consumer tech, roadmap marketing is common. In AI, it is riskier. These features are sold as behavior changes, not minor conveniences, so delays land harder.

The proposed class covers roughly 37 million U.S. devices, including all iPhone 16 models (including the 16e) and the iPhone 15 Pro and 15 Pro Max, purchased between June 10, 2024 and March 29, 2025. According to settlement documents, eligible claimants would receive $25 per device, an amount that could rise to up to $95 per device depending on the total number of valid claims filed. A court approval hearing is scheduled for June 17, 2026, before Judge Noel Wise in the Northern District of California.

The Settlement still needs court approval on June 17, 2026 and final customer payout will range from $25 to up to $95 per device depending on claim volume.

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