![Mail app redesign macOS Sequoia](https://9to5mac.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2024/11/mail-redesign-macos.jpg?quality=82&strip=all&w=1600)
Apple unveiled its latest device on Monday, mere days following the widespread release of iOS 18.2. Unfortunately, there’s little to report on the current betas of as we speak regarding novel features, a disappointment for Mac and iPad users as iPadOS 18.3 and macOS 15.3 still lack the revamped Mail application.
The newly redesigned Mail app is now available on both Mac and iPad.
With Apple’s impending release of iOS 18.2, which has been the subject of speculation since its teaser during the WWDC 2024 event in June. The newly launched Mail app boasts a sleek, modern design that effectively categorizes your email inbox into distinct sections: Primary, Social, Promotions, and Updates. The app further simplifies identifying senders of each email. Nonetheless, .
Although Apple has been tight-lipped about a release date for its revamped Mail app on iPad and Mac, leaked marketing images from October’s M4 Mac launch suggest the redesign is imminent for both platforms, implying that an update will eventually reach these devices.
Despite initial expectations, this milestone has not yet transpired, with the recent release of iPadOS 18.3 and macOS 15.3 betas now available for testing purposes. Despite being in its initial beta phase, the Mail app surprisingly maintains a uniform appearance across both iPads and Macs. In reality, this is the primary beta version, and there’s still much to happen before the official launch; however, it’s possible that the new Mail app interface will only arrive on iPad and Mac with iPadOS 18.4 and macOS 15.4, both expected to be released in April 2025?
![iOS 18.2 Mail app](https://9to5mac.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2024/11/mail-ios182-fi.jpg?quality=82&strip=all)
Apple hasn’t been averse to splitting the rollout of new features across devices; this isn’t the first time they’ve done so. The highly anticipated Genmoji feature, allowing users to create personalized emojis, has finally arrived for iPhone and iPad owners with the release of iOS 18.2, although it took a little longer to roll out on Macs, debuting in macOS 15.3 beta 1.
Some customers, however, were not pleased with the newly introduced categorisation feature in the Mail app and its departure from the traditional organisational structure, which they had grown accustomed to across their various devices.
Apple is expected to release iOS 18.3, iPadOS 18.3, and macOS 15.3 to the masses sometime within a window spanning January and February.
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