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iOS 26 adoption now hovers at around 50%, according to StatCounter, but some users are still cautious about updating.

iOS-26-App-Icon-Against-Wall-Feature.jpg

New data published by SellCell provides a look at how users have responded to the push to update to iOS 26. The findings are based on a January 2026 survey of 2,000 U.S.-based adult iPhone users and focus on adoption status, update behavior, and perceived risks associated with installing iOS 26.

78% of SellCell's respondents say they have updated their iPhone to iOS 26, while 22% report that they are still running an earlier version of iOS. There have been other reports of low adoption for iOS 26, so 78% would be unusually high and may indicate a disproportionate number of tech enthusiasts among respondents. Realistically, the actual number likely lies somewhere in between at around 50%, as StatCounter shows. SellCell stresses that the data reflects self-reported behavior rather than device-verified installation rates.

Nevertheless, the survey highlights key reasons as to why some users have still not upgraded. 24.2% of respondents said they were concerned that iOS 26 could negatively affect battery life, while 23.8% worried about overall performance. 17.5% of respondents said they disliked the design changes debuted with Liquid Glass, or found it harder to read, while an additional 8.6% said they were frustrated that new visual elements could not be fully turned off. 15% of respondents said they worried it would be difficult or impossible to revert to an earlier version of iOS once iOS 26 was installed, while 11.4% cited reports of bugs or features breaking as a reason for hesitation.

SellCell's data also suggests that adoption does not necessarily reflect confidence. When asked about their general response to iOS update prompts, only 38.8% of respondents said they typically update immediately when prompted. The remaining 61.2% reported some form of delay or deferral, including waiting to see whether other users report problems, assuming updates occur automatically, dismissing reminders, or postponing updates for weeks or months. A smaller share said they only update once an app stops working on their current version of iOS.

In addition, the survey found that hesitation around iOS 26 is widespread even among users who have already installed the update. Across the full sample of 2,000 respondents, 72% selected at least one concern that made them hesitant about upgrading, while only 28% said that nothing they had seen put them off installing iOS 26. It is also notable that, of the 443 respondents who said they were still on an older version, 28% said they were unaware that iOS 26 was available, 23.7% said they assumed updates would install automatically, and 23.3% said they simply had not gotten around to updating.

Article Link: iOS 26 Adoption Hits 50%, But Some Users Are Still Reluctant to Update
 
50% is 25% to high in my view, the OS is a mess and should never have been released with all the bug.

The fact they are stealing battery for a feature you may not want and not turn off should that in of it self make this a non-starter for folks to upgrade to.

I am leaving out the choice on what you think of the style as that is a mater of taste and not of function.
 
This shows overwhelming active resistance. By the way the OS aggressively nags users about the update, it should have been 80% on the first month of roll out.

Just yesterday I helped someone with an iPad on iOS 18 that had turned back on auto download and install even though I turned it off myself a while back, and yesterday's only choice was iOS 26. I had to turn off auto install again. Other people have been experiencing something like this too, besides the usual big red badge on Settings, and they keep turning down iOS 26.
 
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78% of SellCell's respondents say they have updated their iPhone to iOS 26, while 22% report that they are still running an earlier version of iOS. There have been other reports of low adoption for iOS 26, so 78% would be unusually high and may indicate a disproportionate number of tech enthusiasts among respondents. Realistically, the actual number likely lies somewhere in between at around 50%, as StatCounter shows. SellCell stresses that the data reflects self-reported behavior rather than device-verified installation rates.
Translation: SellCell's data doesn't pass the sniff test, so we're going to believe StatCounter even though it shows 16.57% using "Other" which is clearly also wrong.

Who knows what the actual number is? All I can say with any certainty - neither of them have it right.
 
I updated numerous friends and family to iOS26, months after it was released. They simply had no idea the update was sitting there in settings/general/softwareupdate. Important to remember that most people never go near Settings and even more ignore badges altogether (think of all those 2012 messages unread in inbox folks). IMHO apple would do well to deliver a homescreen reminder in the form of a video ad with an "update me tonight" button.
 
I think iOS 26.x versions work best on iPhones with 6 GB or more of RAM. I've had no issues so far with iOS 26.1 and 26.2 on my iPhone 16 Plus and iPad Air M3 13", so...
 
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Right on top of the ugly ass chart on StatCounter we have:
Apple's Safari anti-fingerprinting changes misreported iOS 26.2 as 18.7 and iOS 26.1 as 18.6. Patch applied on 19 Jan 2026 to correct Apple-introduced distortion.
MacRumors, do you really think that the reported data is accurate when we don't know if the entire iOS user base has applied the patch ? Can you even start to do your job properly and cross reference statistics with sources that actually get real data ?!!

We already told you that for iOS 26, data from the User Agent is not trustworthy. Just report data from Aplications instead please.

This is the second time that you just report **** on the subject, be better ffs!!
 
It is also notable that, of the 443 respondents who said they were still on an older version, 28% said they were unaware that iOS 26 was available, 23.7% said they assumed updates would install automatically, and 23.3% said they simply had not gotten around to updating.
Apple needs to put that Dynamic Island to use if they want to see adoption numbers improve. Use it for daily reminders for users that still haven't upgraded to iOS 26. 😂

/s
 
The worst “update” ever for IOS.
The interface is a nice school project at most.
Transparent buttons, really?. So useful.
Even the keyboard is bad in iOS 26.
Don’t “update” guys. I am a day 1 updater and I am using a 17PM so I had no choice but even so many month after, the OS is buggy, laggy, the notifications have many bugs. Really poor experience.
 
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