iPadOS 13

iPadOS is a version of iOS 13 that runs on the iPad, with extra features designed specifically for the iPad's larger display.

By MacRumors Staff
iPadOS

What's New in iPadOS 13

iPadOS, released in the fall of 2019, is a version of iOS 13 that's designed to run on Apple's iPads. According to Apple, iPadOS is built on the same foundation as iOS, but with powerful new capabilities created for the larger display of the iPad.

First and foremost, iPadOS includes almost all of the features available in iOS 13, such as performance optimizations, a new systemwide Dark Mode, a revamped Photos app, a Find My app, Sign In with Apple, updated Maps, and tons more, so for an overview of the new iOS 13 features, make sure to check out our iOS 13 roundup.

The iPadOS roundup below highlights the iPad-specific features that are part of iPadOS, rather than the iOS 13 features available on both platforms.

iPadOS features a new Home screen for the iPad, which shrinks down the app icon size so you can fit more apps on each page. You can also now add Today Widgets from the left side of the screen onto the Home screen itself for easier access to your widgets and at-a-glance info like news headlines, weather, events, and more when your iPad is in landscape mode.

The Split View and Slide Over multitasking options now support multiple windows from the same app, so you can do things like open two Safari windows side by side. When in Slide Over view, there's a new option to view and switch between multiple apps with a new Slide Over card interface.

App Exposé, available when holding down an app's icon, lets you view all of the open windows from a particular app, and there's an option to swap between them with a tap, making it much easier to switch between your open windows on iPad.

Tapping on the corner of the iPad's display with an Apple Pencil opens up Markup, which can now be used for anything from webpages and documents to screenshots and emails. Apple has introduced a redesigned tool palette for quick access to tools, color palettes, shapes, a ruler, an object eraser, and a new pixel eraser. The new tool palette is available in Markup and is also available to third-party developers as an API.

ipadOS expose

In addition to the new Markup features, Apple has reduced the latency of the Apple Pencil, dropping it from 20ms to 9ms.

ios13toolbar

The iPadOS Files app supports folder sharing, so you can share whole folders of files with other people, and there's also support for external drives for the first time. You can plug in a USB drive or an SD card and pull data from it right in the Files app, a feature also available on the iPhone.

ipadosfiles

A new Column View in the Files app when the iPad is in landscape mode lets you see high-resolution previews of your files, and support for Quick Actions lets you do things like mark up and rotate images and create PDFs. iPadOS also brings support for local storage, zip and unzip, and 30 new keyboard shortcuts.

When you use Safari on the iPad, you're always going to get the desktop version of a website instead of the mobile version. Websites are scaled appropriately for the iPad's display and optimized for touch, so you can use your favorite web apps like WordPress, Squarespace, Google Docs, and Slack.

For the first time, Safari has a download manager, which is a game changer when it comes to managing files that you've downloaded on an iPad from the web, plus Apple has made improvements to tab management.

ipaddownloadmanager

As with the iPhone, editing text on iPad is better than ever thanks to a new swipe gesture that lets you select text and new gestures for cut, copy, paste, and undo. A floating keyboard that supports the new QuickPath swipe feature allows you to type one handed, and there's support for installing fonts across the system.

ipadosswipegestures

Thanks to the inclusion of Haptic Touch on the iPhone XR, iPhone 11, and iPhone 11 Pro models, a long press now replicates much of the functionality that was previously limited to 3D Touch devices. There's no haptic feedback, but long press gestures are available on the iPad across iOS 13 for doing things like Quick Actions, link previews, and more.

New to iPadOS, iOS 13, and tvOS 13 is controller support for the PlayStation DualShock 4 and Xbox One S controllers, which means you no longer need a Made for iPhone controller to play games on these devices. Connecting one of the new controllers is done using Bluetooth.

ipaddarkmode

As mentioned above, take a look at our iOS 13 roundup for a list of features that are available on both the iPad and the iPhone, in addition to the iPad-specific features included in iPadOS. We've also got a roundup of the most important features in our iPad Tips and Tricks guide and in the video below.

Note: See an error in this roundup or want to offer feedback? Send us an email here.

Current Version - iPadOS 13.7

The current version of iPadOS 13 is iPadOS 13.7, released to the public on September 1. iPadOS 13.7 is a bug fix update that was released alongside iOS 13.7 for iPhone, a more significant update that introduces "Exposure Notifications Express," a feature that lets users opt-in to the Exposure Notification System without downloading an app, provided their region supports it.

iOS 13.7 updates the Exposure Notification API with "Exposure Notifications Express," a feature that allows Exposure Notifications to work without an app.

New Home Screen

By splitting up iOS 13 and iPadOS, Apple is free to make changes designed just for the larger display of the iPad. One of these changes includes an iPad-specific Home screen redesign, created specifically for bigger displays.

Icons on the iPad's Home screen now take up less space so you can fit more of them on each page of the Home screen, and there's a handy new widget feature.

iPadOS home screen

You can move the Today View widgets right onto the Home screen so you can see your most important information right on the display. All of your standard widgets appear, but only in landscape mode.

In portrait mode, your widgets are where they always are -- accessible with a swipe to the right on the Home screen. Customize your widgets by accessing them on the Home screen and tapping the "Edit" button at the bottom. Favorited widgets are the ones that show up on the Home screen, but you can swipe to see all of your other widgets.

Multitasking Updates

Having multiple windows open on an iOS device has always been a feature specific to the iPad, and in iPadOS, Apple has introduced some improvements to make multitasking more powerful and functional.

Both the Split View and Slide Over multitasking interfaces support multiple windows from the same app, so you can do things like open two Safari windows side by side or open two Pages documents at once.

safarisplitview

You can have multiple instances of the same app in multiple spaces so you can have several windows open at once, swapping between the various spaces through the App Switcher.

Creating windows can be done by dragging content from one window into its own space. You can, for example, drag a link to open Safari, a location to open Maps, or an email address to open Mail.

Slide Over

When using the Slide Over interface, there's an option to view and switch between multiple apps more quickly, which lets you open up several apps and then flip between them as needed, similar to having several open windows on a Mac.

ipadosappswitcher

Using Slide Over this way makes it easy to do something like access Messages or Calendar quickly while working on a document or browsing the web with the Split View interface.

You can keep all of the apps you need to access occasionally stored in Slide Over, swapping between them with just a few taps. Swipe up to see all of your apps in Slide Over, and make a Slide Over app full screen by dragging it upwards.

You can close Slide Over app windows by accessing the App Switcher and then flicking upwards on a window in Slide Over.

App Exposé

App Exposé is a new feature that's available when holding down on an app's icon. It lets you view all of the open windows from a particular app, and there's an option to swap between them with a tap, making it easy to see everything that you've got open and swap between tasks.

ipadosappexpose 1

Apple Pencil Improvements

With iPadOS, the Apple Pencil is more deeply integrated into the iPad, mainly through new Markup tools available throughout the operating system.

Markup

Entire webpages, documents, or emails can be edited and annotated using the Markup feature by swiping the Apple Pencil from the corner of the screen. Dragging the Apple Pencil from the bottom corner of the iPad also lets you take a screenshot.

ipadosnewtoolbar

Markup has a new tool palette with quicker access to the tools that you use most along with color palettes, shapes, an object eraser, and a new pixel eraser that removes any part of a stroke. There's also a new ruler tool designed to help you draw straight lines.

The tool palette can be dragged anywhere on the screen so you can customize how you work, and Apple is making the API available to developers so the same familiar toolbar is available across apps.

Latency

Thanks to optimization improvements, the Apple Pencil's latency is as low as 9 milliseconds now, down from 20 milliseconds.

apple pencil 2

Files App

Revamped in both iPadOS and iOS 13, the new Files app supports USB drives, SSDs, SD cards, SMB file servers, and more, allowing you to access the files you need right within the Files app.

filesquicklook

There's a new Column View available in the Files app that lets you preview your files, just like you can do with Finder on Mac. It even supports Quick Actions like Markup, rotate, and create PDF, so you can do even more on your iPad right within the Files app.

iCloud Drive now supports folder sharing so you can share entire folders with people, and there's local storage now, so you can store files right on your iPad. This feature is coming in an update to iOS 13 in the fall.

Apple has also added new keyboard shortcuts for accessing the Files app and an ability to zip and unzip files.

Safari

Safari on iPad now automatically loads desktop versions of websites, scaled appropriately to the iPad's display and optimized for touch. This means iPad users are no longer forced to load mobile versions of websites in some cases, for a consistent computer-like Safari usage experience.

Safari on iPadOS full desktop site

The new Safari experience works with web apps like Google Docs, Squarespace, and WordPress, so you can do everything you can normally do on a Mac on your iPad.

Safari also features 30 new keyboard shortcuts, improvements to tab management, and a new download manager so you can see just what you've downloaded. When using Safari in Split View, you'll now see the full Safari toolbar.

iPadOS Safari shortcuts

More on Safari

For more on all of the new features in Safari in iOS 13 and iPadOS, make sure to check out our Safari guide.

Text Editing

To scroll through long documents and web pages, you can now grab the scroll bar and drag it downwards or upwards, which is quicker than simple swiping. Selecting text can now be done by dragging your finger over it.

You can select a word with a double tap, an entire sentence with a triple tap, or a whole paragraph with a quadruple tap.

Double tapping quickly selects elements like phone numbers, email addresses, and addresses, and you can now pick up the cursor and move it to where you need it with a simple drag, a gesture that's quicker than the prior iOS 12 cursor movement.

Apple added new gestures for cut, copy, and paste. Pinch up with three fingers to copy, pinch up with fingers two times to cut, and pinch down with three fingers to paste. To undo and redo, you can now use three finger swipes to the left and right.

ipadosnewgestures

If you want to select multiple email messages, files, or folders, you can tap with two fingers and then use a drag gesture.

To make typing even simpler on the iPad, Apple has added a new floating keyboard that enables one-handed typing. It supports Apple's new QuickPath swipe-based typing feature.

swipekeyboardipad

Enabling the new floating keyboard can be done by pinching in on the keyboard and dragging it anywhere on the iPad's screen.

Long Press Gestures

In iOS 13, long press gestures on the iPad mimic some of the functionality that was previously limited to devices with 3D Touch. This is because Apple has been introducing support for Haptic Touch, a 3D Touch replacement first introduced on the iPhone XR and then expanded to the new 2019 iPhone models.

You can long press on an app to bring up Quick Actions, for example, or peek into a link to see a little preview. You won't get a haptic feedback response like you do on the iPhone, but the functionality is there all the same.

Sidecar

With macOS Catalina, your iPad can be used as a secondary display for your Mac, either by extending your Mac's display or mirroring it. With this feature, you can use apps like Photoshop or Illustrator right on your iPad, and they even work with Apple Pencil.

mac sidecar 2

When not being used for drawing, the Apple Pencil works for pointing and clicking like you might do with a mouse. You can write and sketch on PDFs for documents and see the updates live on your Mac, or create a sketch on iPad and then insert it into any document on Mac.

Sidecar works with a cable or wirelessly from within 10 meters and it needs to be initiated from a Mac to work. Sidecar on iPad is limited to iPads that work with the Apple Pencil. For more on Sidecar, make sure to check out our Sidecar guide.

Mouse Support

iPadOS introduces mouse support for the first time, allowing a USB mouse to be connected to an iPad. Mouse support is not a standard feature, but is instead available as an AssistiveTouch option within the Accessibility settings on your iOS device.

ipad pro mouse

iPadOS How Tos

iOS 13

The iPad and the iPhone share many features, and there are a lot of other new changes in iOS 13 that are also available in iPadOS. In fact, all of the new features in iOS 13, including Dark Mode, Find My, app updates, and more, are in iPadOS.

For details on these features, make sure to check out our iOS 13 roundup.

Compatibility

iPadOS is also compatible with a wide range of iPads, both old and new.

  • All iPad Pros

  • iPad (5th, 6th & 7th generation)

  • iPad mini 4 & 5

  • iPad Air (3rd generation)

  • iPad Air 2

Release Date

Apple released iPadOS to the public on Tuesday, September 24, alongside iOS 13.1 and following the September 19 launch of iOS 13 for iPhones. The first available version of iPadOS was iPadOS 13.1.

iPadOS 13 Timeline

Roundup Last Updated
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