New Releases

Apple CarPlay Adds Grok Support, Bringing More Natural AI Voice Chats to the Dashboard

Reading Guide

2 min read

Apple CarPlay Adds Grok Support, Bringing More Natural AI Voice Chats to the Dashboard image 1

Apple CarPlay Adds Grok Support, Bringing More Natural AI Voice Chats to the Dashboard image 2

Apple CarPlay Adds Grok Support, Bringing More Natural AI Voice Chats to the Dashboard image 3

Apple is continuing to open up the in-car software experience, and a new report says Apple CarPlay now supports Grok AI alongside other conversational tools such as ChatGPT and Perplexity. The change gives iPhone users another way to bring an AI assistant into the dashboard without needing a dedicated built-in car system.

The broader shift started with iOS 26.4, when Apple expanded CarPlay support for voice-based conversation apps. That move made it easier for AI chat services to work more naturally in the car. Once an iPhone is connected to a vehicle, supported apps can be used through the center display instead of forcing users to keep switching back to the phone.

According to 9to5Mac, xAI recently updated the iPhone version of Grok so users can access the service through CarPlay. For commuters and drivers who already use AI on their phones, that basically extends the same assistant into the car interface with a workflow built around spoken interaction.

The experience appears to be similar to other AI conversation apps already available on CarPlay. Users can review recent conversations, start a fresh chat session, and continue interacting mainly by voice so the process feels more hands-free while driving.

Grok also adds a couple of controls that are especially useful in the car. One is a temporary mute option, which lets users pause the conversation without fully ending the session. The other is voice switching, allowing people to choose a different speaking voice directly inside the CarPlay version of the app.

That may sound minor, but these kinds of controls matter more in a driving environment than they do on a phone screen. The less a user has to tap around or restart a session, the more natural the whole exchange feels. In that sense, this update is less about flashy new features and more about making voice chats work better in the place where voice interaction matters most.

Previous Google Pixel 12 Leak Points to a Tensor G7 Chip Built on an Improved 2nm Process Next OPPO K15 Leak Points to a 6.78-Inch Flat Display, 8,000mAh Battery, and 80W Charging
C
About cizchu

Senior Technology Editor with 10 years of experience covering mobile technology.

Recommended Articles