Cameras, AI, a delay — and the model most people are still waiting for.
The AirPods Pro 3 launched in September 2025. By spring 2026, Apple was reportedly already building something above it. At the same time, AirPods 5 — the model most people are quietly waiting for — doesn't have a confirmed release date, or even a release window.
That's not a normal upgrade cycle. Apple isn't just refreshing its AirPods lineup; it's redrawing it. So the real question isn't which AirPods are newest — it's which model best matches what you actually want from them.
The Lineup, Mapped
Before diving into what's coming, here's where things stand:
● AirPods 4 ($129 / $179 with ANC) — open-ear, H2 chip, Apple's everyday pick
● AirPods Pro 3 ($249) — in-ear, H2 chip, heart rate sensing, improved ANC
● AirPods Ultra (rumored, ~$349+) — in-ear, H3 chip expected, infrared cameras, AI-first
●AirPods 5 (rumored, no timeline) — open-ear, H3 chip expected, standard update
Here's the detail most coverage glosses over: both the AirPods 4 and AirPods Pro 3 run on the same H2 chip — the one Apple first introduced in 2022. The H3 isn't here yet. Based on current rumors, it's being held back for the Ultra and, eventually, the AirPods 5.
Four Models, Four Different Users
| AirPods 4 | AirPods Pro 3 | AirPods Ultra (Rumored) | AirPods 5 (Rumored) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price | $129 / $179 | $249 | ~$299–$349 est. | ~$129–$179 est. |
| Chip | H2 | H2 | H3 (Expected) | H3 (Expected) |
| Design | Open-ear | In-ear | In-ear, Longer Stem | Open-ear (Expected) |
| ANC | Optional | ✓ 2× Improved | ✓ Expected | Optional (Expected) |
| Heart Rate | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ Expected | ✗ |
| IR Camera | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ Core Feature | ✗ |
| Visual Intelligence | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ iOS 27 Dependent | ✗ |
| Water Resistance | IP54 | IP57 | TBC | TBC |
| Available Now | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ |
| Best For | Daily Casual Use | Fitness & Health Tracking | AI Early Adopters | Standard Upgrade (Wait) |
AirPods 4 do exactly what it says. For $179, you get lighter, more comfortable earbuds with optional noise cancellation — features that used to sit behind the Pro paywall. It's not trying to be a health device or an AI assistant. It's just a good pair of earbuds that works seamlessly with your iPhone.

AirPods Pro 3 is where Apple started pushing AirPods toward the body. The headline feature is a heart rate sensor — using invisible infrared light pulsed 256 times per second against blood flow — that works across more than 50 workout types. ANC is genuinely improved over the Pro 2, and IP57 water resistance means it handles sweat and rain without drama. What it doesn't have is a new chip. Everything computationally heavy still leans on your iPhone to process. It's worth noting, too, that AirPods Pro 3 already has hardware capable of lossless audio — Apple just hasn't enabled it yet.

AirPods Ultra (rumored) is something different in kind, not just degree. With Apple expanding its "Ultra" branding across the 2026 lineup — iPhone Ultra, MacBook Ultra — a standalone AirPods Ultra tier above the Pro line now looks more likely than a simple Pro variant. The infrared cameras aren't for photos or video; they're designed to feed environmental data to a next-generation Siri, letting it understand what you're looking at without you having to pull out your phone: a restaurant menu, a product on a shelf, a label. Analyst Ming-Chi Kuo has also pointed to enhanced Spatial Audio with Apple Vision Pro as an additional use case, though Gurman's more recent reporting doesn't mention gesture controls — a feature Kuo predicted in 2024 — suggesting the final feature set is still being sorted. The H3 chip, widely expected but not yet confirmed by Bloomberg, would make real-time processing feasible, with heavier tasks offloaded to the iPhone via Bluetooth.

AirPods 5 is the quietest story in the lineup. No cameras, no health sensors from what's been reported — just an H3 chip upgrade aimed at better sound quality and lower latency. For a lot of people, that's actually the update they want. The catch is there's no timeline attached to it whatsoever.
Why AirPods Ultra Got Delayed — and Why That Matters
Apple originally targeted a first-half 2026 launch for the camera-equipped AirPods. That didn't happen. According to Bloomberg, the holdup isn't the hardware — it's Siri.
The earbuds have reportedly cleared advanced testing and entered what Bloomberg describes as near-production-ready territory, with early mass production expected soon. The design is essentially final. The feature set is locked. What's missing is the smarter, AI-rebuilt Siri that the whole product depends on — tied to iOS 27, currently expected this September alongside the iPhone 18 lineup.
That dependency is the real story. An infrared camera mounted on an earbud stem shoots from ear level, with a constrained field of view and limited light sensitivity. Those are physical realities that won't change. A capable AI can work around them and still deliver something useful. A mediocre one just exposes them. AirPods Ultra isn't selling you a camera — it's selling you what that camera can do. And that's entirely a software question.
The Camera Nobody Around You Agreed To
Most coverage of AirPods Ultra focuses on what the cameras can do. Fewer people are asking what it means for everyone around the wearer.
AirPods are socially invisible. You wear them to the gym, the office, a coffee shop, and nobody looks twice. There's nothing about their appearance that signals "this device has sensors pointed outward." The person wearing them has opted in. The people nearby haven't made that call.
Compare that to Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses, which have faced sustained criticism for ambient surveillance — and those are at least visually distinctive enough that you can recognize them. AirPods Ultra would be harder to identify in the wild, not easier. It's a meaningful difference.
Apple has indicated the cameras capture only low-resolution environmental data, not photography-grade imagery. An indicator light on the stem is supposed to signal active transmission. Whether that's sufficient — and whether the people around you will ever notice it — is a different question entirely.
There's a legitimate counter-argument worth making: for users with visual impairments, this kind of environmental sensing could be genuinely transformative. The technology isn't inherently problematic. The question is whether the norms and disclosures around it keep pace with the hardware shipping date.
It's worth thinking about, even if it ultimately doesn't change what you buy.
What People Are Actually Saying
Community reaction to the AirPods Ultra rumors runs warmer on concept than on conviction. On forums and across platforms like Reddit and YouTube, the dominant mode isn't excitement — it's interested skepticism. People find the idea compelling, but aren't lining up to be first in line. The framing that shows up most often is that this feels like the future, which is another way of saying it doesn't feel quite ready. (r/apple · YouTube)
AirPods 5 discussion is quieter and more patient. Most people asking about it are coming from AirPods 3 or 4 and simply want a proper refresh of the standard line — no cameras, no ambitions, just cleaner sound and a fair price.(r/airpods)
The consistent thread underneath both conversations: people are open to Apple turning AirPods into an AI interface. They just don't want it to come at the cost of the things that made AirPods worth buying — battery life, comfort, audio quality, and reliability. (r/airpods)
So, Which AirPods Should You Actually Get?
If you want something now and don't need health features, get AirPods 4 with ANC at $179. The H2 chip is mature and stable, and you're not paying for things you won't use.
If you work out with your iPhone and care about fitness tracking, get AirPods Pro 3 at $249. The heart rate sensor is legitimately accurate, ANC is meaningfully improved over its predecessor, and IP57 holds up in real conditions.
If you want the AI features and you're willing to wait, hold out for AirPods Ultra, but go in clear-eyed. September 2026 is the most optimistic scenario, tied directly to the timing of the iOS 27 release. Set your expectations accordingly: the experience ceiling will be defined by how capable the new Siri actually turns out to be — not by the hardware.
If you just want a better version of what AirPods already are, you're waiting for AirPods 5. There's no timeline. If that feels too open-ended, AirPods 4 is the practical bridge that won't leave you feeling like you've compromised.
While You're Waiting, Protect What You Have
Whichever direction you go — AirPods 4 today, AirPods Pro 3 for the fitness features, or holding out for Ultra's longer-stem design — one thing stays constant: the charging case gets beaten up. It's in and out of pockets a dozen times a day, dropped on bathroom counters, tossed into bags alongside keys and cables. It's the first part of any AirPods setup to show wear, and it has nothing to do with which model you chose. And if AirPods Ultra does arrive with that extended stem housing the cameras, it'll have more surface area to protect than anything that came before it.
ESR makes cases for AirPods 4 (2024) and AirPods Pro 3 (2025): MagSafe-compatible builds that charge without removing the case, dual-layer drop protection built for actual falls rather than lab simulations, in multiple series — Cyber (magnetic locking lid), Orbit (hybrid shell), and Cloud (slim silicone). Each one is designed around the specific dimensions of its model, so fit isn't an afterthought.
For AirPods Ultra: once Apple confirms the final design, ESR will be there. In the meantime, everything currently available is at esrtech.com/collections/airpods-cases.
This article will be updated as Apple confirms new product details.