Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple might arm AirPods with live translation facility this year

Simon Cohen wearing Apple AirPods 4.
Simon Cohen / Digital Trends

Apple has lately focused on giving the AirPods more of a wellness-focused makeover than hawking them as plain wireless earbuds. Late last year, the AirPods Pro 2 landed a Loud Sound Reduction feature, alongside a hearing test system and hearing aid facility.

Now, the company is reportedly eyeing a conversational upgrade for them. According to Bloomberg, Apple plans to bring a real-time translation facility to the AirPods later this year. The focus is on removing the language barrier for in-person conversations.

Recommended Videos

The feature is said to be in active development and might be rolled out via a software update later this year, tied to the iOS 19 bundle. It’s going to be a two-way translation system where the AirPods and iPhone play an equal role.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

How it works?

The Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max with AirPods Pro 2.
Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The iPhone will serve as the translation hub. It will translate language A into language B, sending the translated audio to the person wearing the Apple earbuds. Meanwhile, language B will be translated into language A, and the translated audio stream will be played via the iPhone’s speaker for the other person.

It is not clear what translation engine Apple is going to use, nor does the report mention whether it’s going to be an AI-assisted approach and how many languages the system will support. Either way, the facility is meaningful, but Apple won’t be the first to the market.

Apple is late to the game

Google’s Pixel-branded wireless earbuds have offered this convenience for a while now. The company has relied on the Google Translate stack to allow translations in nearly four dozen languages. Users can pick between the live Conversation Mode for direct voice chat, or rely on the Transcribe Mode.

The Google Pixel 9 Pro and Google Pixel Buds Pro 2.
Google Pixel Buds Pro 2 offer language translation facility. Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Aside from Google, numerous other brands have also jumped on the “translation earbuds” bandwagon. The Earfun AirPro 4+ earbuds, introduced earlier this year, also offer an AI-driven real-time translation trick. The Mymanu Click and Mars earbuds have been offering the perk since 2017.

There’s even a “translation earbuds” niche, where products such as the Timekettle X1 offer language translation convenience to business and enterprise customers. Meanwhile, AI chatbots such as Google’s Gemini also offer language translation facilities.

In Apple’s case, the company can go in either direction. The company already has a partnership in place with OpenAI, which puts ChatGPT in the driving seat for every occasion where Siri comes up short. Neural machine translation has also developed dramatically and there are multiple open-source models out there up for taking.

Meta, for example, open-sourced its AI-assisted translation tool that supports nearly 200 languages, all the way back in 2022. Yet, given Apple’s privacy-first approach, the company will either stick to a trusted partner or even deploy its own tech stack that can perform on-device translations, which is safer as well as quicker compared to a cloud-tethered format.

Nadeem Sarwar
Nadeem is a tech and science journalist who started reading about cool smartphone tech out of curiosity and soon started…
Why the AirPods Pro’s best new feature is forbidden in over 100 countries
An Apple iPhone 14 showing the limited hearing protection options available in Canada under iOS 18.1.

Guess what Canada, France, Spain, China, the United Kingdom, Mexico, and 100 other countries have in common? None are able to take advantage of the Apple AirPods Pro 2's best new hearing health features.

Sitting in my home office in Toronto, I learned this the hard way: After upgrading my iPhone and AirPods Pro 2 to the latest software this week, I was offered the hearing protection feature, but I still couldn't see the hearing test and hearing aid options slated to arrive with iOS 18.1.

Read more
I’ve been using AirPods Pro as hearing protection for years
Apple AirPods Pro 2 sitting in front of a motorcycle helmet.

With the launch of iOS 18.1 imminent, Apple is about to officially recognize the AirPods Pro’s hearing protection capabilities. And all I can say is this: What took so long?

For seven years, I rode a Harley-Davidson touring bike with aftermarket pipes and a high-flow air intake — modifications that made it a lot louder than when it rolled off the assembly line. On most motorcycles it’s wind noise and not the sound of your bike that poses the greatest risk to your hearing. Not so with my Harley.

Read more
With FDA approval, AirPods Pro can now help tackle hearing aid stigma
A person wearing the Apple AirPods Pro 2.

It's official: Apple has won U.S. Food and Drug Adminstration (FDA) clearance to market its AirPods Pro 2 wireless earbuds as OTC hearing aids. The evolution of these personal audio devices into full-fledged hearing aids could have big ramifications for the fledgling over-the-counter hearing aid market and people's willingness to adopt these devices.

At its iPhone 16 launch event in September, Apple announced that its existing flagship wireless earbuds will get several new hearing health features later this fall.

Read more