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How AI is Shaping the Next Generation of Mobile Apps: 5 Trends to Watch in 2026

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Mobile apps are facing their biggest transformation since the launch of the App Store in 2008. This is the message from digital product company Framna, based on their Mobile Apps Trend Report 2025.

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The app world has entered a new phase where interfaces, functionality, and, above all, artificial intelligence merge to create more personal and proactive user experiences.

“Mobile apps will not disappear, quite the opposite. But they will act more autonomously, and adapt to the user’s needs in real-time across multiple interfaces. This represents a paradigm shift in how we think about our apps,” says Kristian Friis, Managing Director at Framna Denmark.

The report highlights five key trends driving this development:

  1. AI makes apps proactive and context-aware
    Apps are evolving from being tools that respond to input to being able to anticipate user needs and act accordingly. By understanding context, behaviour and intentions, apps can assist users even before they realise what they need.

    “It could be a public transport app that notices you often take a particular bus home on Fridays, and therefore suggests an alternative route when it detects that the bus is delayed,” says Kristian Friis. “Or a fitness app that knows when you typically lose motivation and then sends exactly the right reminder or challenge at exactly the right time. This functionality does not just enable smarter apps, but potentially entirely new business models,” he adds.

  2. Content creation becomes accessible to all
    The implementation of AI in businesses is evolving rapidly, enabling everyone to create content, including through apps, which raises new demands.

    “Many AI solutions quickly become commoditised, and content creation is now accessible to all. We therefore believe that design, credibility and advisory services will play an even more essential role in differentiating the digital customer experience. AI, for instance, still has a tendency to hallucinate, and businesses must remain mindful of that.”

  3. On-device AI and transparent processes for security and ethics
    With AI features running directly on the mobile device, for example, via Apple Intelligence, apps no longer need to send sensitive data to the cloud. The result is faster responses, stronger security and new opportunities for real-time personalised services. In addition, the EU’s new AI Act means new apps must be built from the outset with transparency, control mechanisms and ethical principles in mind.

    “Users will demand greater insight into what AI systems are doing and how their data is being used. A health app must not only be smart, it must also be reliable and able to explain its conclusions in a way that is easy to understand,” says Kristian Friis.

  4. Apps become more integrated, while maintaining their role
    An app’s functionality will increasingly be distributed across other interfaces such as voice assistants, messaging platforms and AI agents. This raises new demands for designing features that work both inside and outside the app itself.

    “The decision on whether to build an app or a web-based solution for a business or service will increasingly be a ‘both-and’ choice. Intelligent functions and new forms of interaction must be able to exist both within the app and across other channels. This is not new, but we will need to think much more in terms of ecosystems and integration with other services,” says Kristian Friis.

  5. Multimodal interfaces change the way we interact with apps
    Future apps must be able to handle text, voice, images and gestures, often in combination. This means UX design must adapt to human communication rather than classic step-based navigation.

    “We are already seeing the first examples of apps that combine voice recognition, text and camera data, but soon this will become standard. For example, you will be able to point your camera at an object, describe what you need help with, and immediately receive a suggestion, without pressing a single button,” says Kristian Friis.

“If you design apps today with the logic of the 2020s, you risk ending up with yesterday’s solution to tomorrow’s problem. The task now is to think modular, multimodal, meaningful and human,” concludes Kristian Friis.

AI in apps will also be a central theme at Future Product Days in Copenhagen, 24–25 September. Read more about the event here: https://www.futureproductdays.com/

Read the report here: https://framna.com/mobile-app-trends-2025

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About Framna

At Framna, we partner with industry leaders (and those about to be) to craft excellent digital products that define markets, reshape industries, and drive meaningful growth. Every day, our work powers digital experiences for millions of people worldwide.

Framna was born from the strong product-led culture of digital agencies Bontouch, Move, and Shape joining forces. Our 500+ experts work across eight studios in Denmark, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States.

Discover more at www.framna.com.

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