iPad 12 Rumored to Get iPhone 17's A19 Chip, Breaking Apple Tradition

The next-generation low-cost iPad will use Apple's A19 chip, according to a report from Macworld. Macworld claims to have seen an "internal Apple code document" with information about the 2026 ‌iPad‌ lineup.

ipad blue prime day
Prior documentation discovered by MacRumors suggested that the ‌iPad‌ 12 would be equipped with an A18 chip, not an A19 chip. The A19 chip was just released this year in the iPhone 17, and it would be unusual for Apple to use a current-generation chip in the low-cost ‌iPad‌ due to cost.

Apple's most affordable ‌iPad‌ has not had a current-generation chip since the ‌iPad‌ 4, which is back when Apple was still designing AX chips for its tablet lineup. The ‌iPad‌ 5 that came out in 2017 used the A9 chip that was originally introduced in the 2015 iPhone 6s, and since then, the ‌iPad‌ has been equipped with an A-series chip that's a generation or two behind the chip in the most recently released ‌iPhone‌.

The current ‌iPad‌ 11 that was released in March 2025 uses the A16 chip that first debuted in the ‌iPhone‌ 14 in 2022, for example. The ‌iPad‌ 10 (October 2022) used the A14 (September 2020), the ‌iPad‌ 9 (September 2021) used the A13 (September 2019), and the ‌iPad‌ 8 (September 2020) used the A12 (September 2018). A 2024 A18 chip for the 2026 ‌iPad‌ would be in line with prior launches.

The model numbers listed in Macworld's report are also unusual. It says that J581 and J588 are the codenames for the upcoming 12th-generation ‌iPad‌, but codenames are typically sequential. Codenames are how Apple references unreleased devices in its software. In prior code leaks, J581 and J582 appeared to reference the low-cost ‌iPad‌ 12.

Prior leaks have suggested that the iPad mini will use the A19 chip, but the ‌iPad mini‌ was previously referenced in Apple code as J510 and J511. Apple sometimes changes its plans and makes updates to unreleased devices, so the A19 chip for the ‌iPad‌ can't be ruled out entirely.

It is not yet clear if Macworld is correct about the A19 chip for the ‌iPad‌ given previous information, but other parts of the report seem more in line with expectations. Macworld suggests the next-generation iPad Air will use an M4 chip, and that both the upcoming ‌iPad‌ and ‌iPad Air‌ will be equipped with Apple's N1 networking chip.

The ‌iPad Air‌ typically gets an M-series chip that's a generation behind the chip in the iPad Pro, and since it's been updated to the M5, the M4 makes sense for the next ‌iPad Air‌. Apple has also been adding the new N1 networking chip to newly released devices, starting with this year's iPhones. The N1 chip is an Apple-designed Bluetooth and Wi-Fi chip that's more energy efficient than chips designed by third-party companies.

Apple is expected to release the new ‌iPad Air‌ and ‌iPad‌ models early in 2026.

Related Roundup: iPad
Buyer's Guide: iPad (Caution)
Related Forum: iPad

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Top Rated Comments

MacUserFella Avatar
8 weeks ago
I don’t care if it breaks tradition, if it’s better, I’m happier
Score: 12 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Arislan Avatar
8 weeks ago
I wonder if they have an excess of A19 chips from the iPhone Air not selling well or can get binned chips cheaper. Maybe unifying on a few chip families rather than a whole range makes more sense.
Score: 11 Votes (Like | Disagree)
CWallace Avatar
8 weeks ago

...I wonder if it is more cost effective for Apple to produce the A19.
Might be. The A19 family is fabricated on the N3P process, which is the "performance" variant of N3 and the successor to the N3E process used in the A18 family. It might be that Apple's buy of N3P is large enough that it is more effective from a cost and product availability standpoint to just use A19.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
sublunar Avatar
8 weeks ago

There's a shortage of wafers so the fewer models of CPUs they produce the better. That's why it makes no sense for the new MacBook to get an A18, if it does come out, it'll get an A19 Pro. Only the new Apple TV should receive A18.

Might be. The A19 family is fabricated on the N3P process, which is the "performance" variant of N3 and the successor to the N3E process used in the A18 family. It might be that Apple's buy of N3P is large enough that it is more effective from a cost and product availability standpoint to just use A19.
I wonder if the A19 has far fewer bad CPUs than A18 too as a mature iteration of N3? Or could they be developing a binning plan which - for example - allows iPad mini to get more GPUs (or higher clocked CPUs) than the ones that go into the iPad and AppleTV? Consolidating products around binned iterations of the same family would therefore make economic sense to Apple rather than having multiple variations of different CPUs.

The old rumour was the AppleTV was getting A17Pro which is what is in the iPad mini right now but that's known to run hot and have a higher failure rate making each CPU more expensive. If the iPad gets A19 then the knock on effect should be the iPad mini getting A19 and by extension the AppleTV getting the same. This then makes sense if the A19 is to be a long term CPU - getting made for a few years as it's likely to spent at least a couple of years in those products and RAM allocation might be important at this stage too.

The AppleTV also has good reason to get efficient cpus since the current 3rd generation lacks the fan that the 2nd generation has. Relying on passive cooling surely demands the most efficient CPU possible.

And also don't forget we have allegedly Apple MacBook getting A19. Would be quite the family then.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
goonie4life9 Avatar
8 weeks ago
I guess the A18 just wasn’t ready to truly delight iPad customers?

But seriously, I wonder if it is more cost effective for Apple to produce the A19.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
WilliApple Avatar
8 weeks ago
Good, why did Apple need to release 2 year old chips for iPads to begin with... Makes the iPad very outdated after just one year.
Like my brother feels his iPad A14 is outdated, and he got it for Christmas in 2024...
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)