Apple Intelligence Cleared in China With Alibaba and Baidu on Board

Apple Intelligence China approval is finally here. China’s Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), the country’s top internet regulator, has officially registered Apple’s AI service for use on iPhones in the country, ending a wait of over two years and opening the door to the world’s largest smartphone market.

The news broke on July 15, 2026, and sent Apple’s stock to a record high. On the New York Stock Exchange, Apple rose 4.01% to close at $327.50, a new all-time high. Alibaba’s American depositary receipts closed up 4.78%, while Baidu’s ADR gained 1.59%. That reaction tells you how big this deal really is.

Apple Intelligence China Gets the Green Light From Regulators

The Cyberspace Administration of China published a notice confirming the licence for Apple Intelligence, the AI feature used to summarise emails, draft reports, edit images, and perform other tasks. It was granted alongside six other smartphone-based AI services, including those for Samsung and Huawei.

Apple Intelligence and Samsung’s Galaxy AI were the only foreign services to be approved. The five other recipients, Huawei, Oppo, Vivo, Xiaomi, and ZTE, are all local Chinese smartphone vendors. Getting on that list alongside Chinese giants is a significant win for Apple.

China has restrictive laws about generative AI software, large language models, and data privacy. It is sufficiently difficult to obtain Chinese government approval that OpenAI is banned in the country. Apple spent more than two years navigating this maze.

Alibaba’s Qwen Model Will Power the Core Features

Alibaba confirmed its part of the arrangement directly, telling Reuters that its Qwen model will power Apple Intelligence functions across iOS, iPadOS, macOS, and visionOS for Chinese users, including both text and image generation.

The specific role of Baidu is less clear, but a spokesperson for the company confirmed its involvement in developing features for the Chinese version of the AI service. Earlier reports from 2025 suggested Alibaba was building the main system while Baidu was contributing on a smaller scale, and the current arrangement appears to follow that same plan.

Apple’s decision to adopt a dual-supplier model, rather than relying on a single Chinese AI provider, likely reflects several strategic objectives. It enables what might be described as functional specialisation, Apple can separate AI capabilities into distinct layers and assign each layer to different domestic partners. This approach helps satisfy Chinese regulatory requirements while preserving supply chain flexibility and redundancy.

Prior to working with Alibaba, Apple was reportedly exploring a deal with Baidu but faced issues adapting its models for Chinese customers. It also explored integrations with DeepSeek and with models from ByteDance, reports claimed.

What the Chinese Version of Apple Intelligence Will Look Like

The version of Apple Intelligence that Chinese users get will be meaningfully different from what users in the United States, Europe, or Pakistan see. While it may have received approval for use in China, Apple Intelligence in that country will differ from that available in other countries around the globe.

Use of these Chinese partner firms also raises questions about how Apple Intelligence will be censored in the country. China requires all AI services to filter content according to government guidelines, so certain topics and outputs will be restricted for Chinese users in ways that do not apply elsewhere.

Regulatory filing does not automatically mean immediate commercial availability. Apple Intelligence must still complete security reviews, engineering adaptation, and possible operating system updates before deployment, and different features may ultimately be rolled out in phases.

No launch date has been given, though approval typically precedes a rollout by only a few months, putting a China debut roughly in line with Apple’s usual fall software release cycle. That points to a likely launch alongside the broader wave of new device launches expected this autumn, as the wider tech industry gears up for its busiest season.

Why This Matters for the Global AI Race

China is not a side market, it is central to Apple’s business. In the second quarter, Apple sales in Greater China increased 28% to $20.5 billion. Actually bringing AI to iPhones in the country should help Apple sustain its sales momentum, although it has a long way to go to catch up with domestic rivals like Huawei and Xiaomi, who have already added AI features to their handsets.

There is also a geopolitical wrinkle that most coverage glosses over. In June 2026, the U.S. Department of Defense added both Alibaba and Baidu to its Section 1260H Chinese Military Companies List, potentially introducing new variables into Apple’s global supply chain governance. This puts Apple in a delicate position, partnering with firms that Washington now labels as tied to the Chinese military, while simultaneously trying to stay in the good books of both governments.

The market views that the long-standing relationship Apple CEO Tim Cook has built with the Chinese government likely had a significant impact on the approval process. Cook previously visited Beijing in May as part of U.S. President Donald Trump’s economic delegation.

What This Means for Pakistani iPhone Users

For iPhone users in Pakistan, this approval does not change what they see on their own devices, Apple Intelligence in Pakistan runs on Apple’s global setup, not the China-specific version. Pakistani users with an iPhone 15 Pro or newer who have already enabled Apple Intelligence will continue to use it as normal.

But the bigger picture matters. With China now on board, Apple has secured its two largest markets, the US and China, for Apple Intelligence. That gives Apple stronger financial ground to keep investing in its AI roadmap. Features that arrive first in bigger markets tend to roll out globally over time, which is good news for users everywhere, including Pakistan.

For Pakistanis who buy grey-market iPhones imported from China, a common practice given price differences, the Chinese variant will eventually carry a different AI experience from what a Pakistani-bought iPhone offers. It is worth knowing that before you pick up a Chinese-spec device.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Apple Intelligence?

Apple Intelligence is Apple’s built-in AI system. It can summarise emails and notifications, help you write text, edit and generate images, and power a smarter version of Siri. It is built into iOS, iPadOS, macOS, and visionOS and runs partly on the device itself for privacy.

Why did Apple need special approval for Apple Intelligence China?

China has mandatory guidelines for artificial intelligence services. Chinese law requires an outside company to collaborate with a local provider if it wants to offer AI products in the country. Apple had to find local partners and register with the Cyberspace Administration of China before it could launch.

Which iPhones will support Apple Intelligence in China?

To use Apple Intelligence features, you will need an iPhone 15 Pro or a higher model. The service is expected to roll out as part of Apple’s fall 2026 software update cycle, in line with iOS 27’s public release.

Will Pakistani iPhone users be affected by this change?

Pakistani users on the global version of Apple Intelligence will not be directly affected. However, Pakistanis who buy Chinese-spec iPhones should be aware that the AI features on those devices will be powered by Alibaba’s Qwen model and will be subject to Chinese content rules, which is a different experience from global iPhones.

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