Forget iPhone 18 Pro Max! OpenAI is making a ChatGPT powered phone to take on Apple and Samsung, says report

After capturing the AI market, OpenAI is now seemingly looking to take the competition directly to Apple and Samsung by building its own smartphone. As per analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, citing the latest supply chain checks, OpenAI’s smartphone plans are centred around an AI agent ecosystem, and the device could begin mass production as early as 2028.

What do we know about OpenAI’s smartphone plans?

As per Kuo, OpenAI is working with chipmakers MediaTek and Qualcomm to develop custom processors for its phone, with Luxshare acting as the exclusive system co-design and manufacturing partner. The final specifications and suppliers for the phone are said to be locked in by late 2026 or the first quarter of 2027.

For Luxshare, which is one of Apple’s key assemblers for iPhones and other products, partnering with OpenAI could be a massive strategic play. Kuo notes that the Chinese manufacturer has historically struggled to surpass Hon Hai Precision Industry’s dominant assembly position within Apple’s supply chain, and securing an early partnership with OpenAI gives it a rare opportunity to “become a leading beneficiary in the next smartphone generation.”

Why is OpenAI making a phone?

According to Kuo, OpenAI has realised it needs absolute control over both the operating system and the hardware to deliver a “comprehensive AI agent service.”

He notes that while the current generation of smartphones is built around apps, future AI-powered devices may change that dynamic. Kuo suggests that users may rely on AI agents to complete tasks on their behalf on the OpenAI phone instead of manually opening apps.

Kuo also points out that smartphones still remain the most important personal computing device, continuously capturing real-time user data such as location, behaviour, and usage patterns. This makes them critical for powering “real-time AI agent inference.”

“OpenAI’s advantages lie in its consumer brand, years of accumulated user data, and leading AI models. Smartphone hardware is already highly mature, so OpenAI can work with the supply chain to develop the device. On the business model side, OpenAI may bundle subscriptions with hardware and build a new AI agent ecosystem with developers,” Kuo wrote in a post on X.

How will OpenAI’s smartphone work?

Kuo notes that the ChatGPT-powered phone would rely on a mix of cloud and on-device AI features. The processor on the OpenAI smartphone is reportedly being developed with a strict focus on power consumption, memory hierarchy management, and basic small-model execution so it can continuously understand the user’s context in the background without draining the battery.

Meanwhile, more complex and compute-intensive tasks will be handled by cloud-based AI systems.

The OpenAI smartphone is said to initially target the high-end smartphone segment, which currently ships roughly 300 to 400 million units annually. Kuo notes that if the project turns out to be a success, it could trigger a massive replacement cycle across the industry, driving significant long-term growth for OpenAI’s processor partners.

Notably, a leaked memo from OpenAI had surfaced earlier this year which noted that the ChatGPT maker had shifted its focus in AI development to target Anthropic’s lead in the coding and enterprise market. The company was also said to be deprioritising “side projects,” while the company’s first hardware device with former Apple designer Jony Ive was said to be pushed back to 2027.

Latest

Archaeologists at Pompeii use artificial intelligence to reveal the face of one of the victims

Archaeologists at Pompeii use artificial intelligence to reveal the face of one of the victims

Nearly half of governments to deploy AI at scale, but face execution hurdles

The report titled "KPMG Global Tech Report 2026: Government and Public Sector" said that 48 per cent of government organisations plan to deploy AI use cases int

Is Outlook down right now? Users unable to sign in, witnessing too many ‘errors’

Outlook down: Responding to the outage, the company stated that affected users were being signed out of their accounts and witnessing too many 'errors'

Germany suspects Russia is behind Signal phishing that targeted top officials

Germany suspects Russia is behind Signal phishing that targeted top officials

China Bans Meta’s Acquisition of Manus on National Security Grounds

Beijing has banned the $2.5 billion acquisition and ordered the parties involved to rescind the transaction.

Topics

DeFi Rescue Hurts Anti-Wall Street Pitch After $10 Billion Run

Decentralized finance is in the midst of the largest coordinated rescue in its history, an effort marked by moral hazard concerns and ad-hoc coordination that s

Samsung Electronics may withdraw home appliance and TV sales from China

The company could make a final decision as early as the end of April, marking a major shift in its China strategy.

8th Pay Commission: Who is Chairperson Justice Ranjana Prakash Desai, former Supreme Court judge?

Born in Mumbai and having served as a judge of the Supreme Court of India, Justice Ranjana Prakash Desai is presently serving as the Chairperson of the 8th Cent

Is DA in salary subject to income tax? Is it part of CTC? Check latest FAQs here

The Finance Ministry announced a 2% increase in Dearness Allowance for central government employees and pensioners, effective January 1, 2026, raising it from 5

Archaeologists at Pompeii use artificial intelligence to reveal the face of one of the victims

Archaeologists at Pompeii use artificial intelligence to reveal the face of one of the victims

Did Kriti Sanon step down as Hyphen’s CCO? The brand’s latest campaign reveals the truth

Rumours that Kriti Sanon stepped down as Hyphen’s Chief Customer Officer sparked online buzz before the brand revealed it was a campaign stunt. The actor rema

OpenAI ends Microsoft exclusivity, to offer AI models on Amazon, Google cloud platforms

Since the exclusivity is ending, Microsoft will no longer pay a revenue share on OpenAI products it resells on its cloud.

India’s fertilizer subsidy may jump 20% as Hormuz crisis spikes prices

India's fertilizer subsidy stood at ₹1.86 trillion in the 2025-26 fiscal year (FY26), and was estimated at ₹1.71 trillion in the budget for the ongoing fi
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img